Skip to main content

Full text of "The gazette (1976-03-10)"

See other formats


Rh. 2g crate ee da 
: " LEGISLATI ve oO: 
EDNONTON, ALTA eS 

TSK 226 

VOL. 17 NO. 10 St. Albert & Sturgeon 


A group of avid skaters enjoy a night on the Sturgeon River - before the Spring thaw? 


Council tightens up 
on grantrequests 


It was not a very good 
night for members of the 
gallery at the regular comm- 
ittee of the whole meeting in 
St. Albert last Monday night. 

The committee went thr- 
ough a routine matter of. 
trying to pare down $16,000 
of grants requests which 
came to it via the Parks and 
Recreation Board. It thumb- 
ed through the mulled over 
recreation fee schedules and 
guidelines for the community 
use of school and town 
facilities and decided to join 
the Alberta Parks and Re- 
creation Association. 

It all got rather boring, as 
budget and financial issues 
do, and after a while two 
members of the gallery 
decided to call it quits and 
leave the meeting, shaking 
their heads in disbelief. 

Discussions on these mat- 
ters and a look at 10 goals 
which have been set by the 
Parks and Recreation Board 
to make St. Albert a re- 
creation paradise took an 
hour and a quarter to look at. 
Then council realized that it 
had overshot the mark by 50 
minutes with the Recreation 
Board and made quick shift 
in direction to meet with 
Chairperson of the Social 
Services Board, Janet Dahr 
to see if there were ways of 
saving the Allied Health 
project. This is unique to St. 
Albert but it may be as dead 
as the dodo if funds cannot 
be raised for the federal 
project after March 31. 

One of the major items to 
emerge in the discussions 
with the Recreation Board 
was that the public will once 
again have its say in the 
planning of recreation facili- 
ties in St. Albert. A heavy 
schedule of hearings and 
presentations verbal and 
written will come up later 
this month, with a deadline 
of March 21-25 for hearings 


so that results canbe com- 
piled by late April. Mayor 
Dick.Plain is favouring the 
verbal and written presenta- 
tion approach and said that 
questionnaires, if they are 
not properly set out, could do 
more damage than good. 
Getting back to the finan- 


cial matters which were the 
nub of the meeting last 
Monday night, Councillor 
Barry Breadner hoped that 
the $16,000 worth of grant 
requests. might be pared 
down to $12,000. Councillor 
Margaret Smith was behind 


Please Turn to Page 2 


Health Project 
may be salvaged 


St. Albert council’s com- 
mittee of the whole moved in 
to salvage a unique pilot 
project in St. Albert at its 
regular meeting last Monday 
night -- the Allied Health 
(Social Services) project, 
which will be no more March 
31, if funds are not, forth- 
coming. 

The Allied Health project 
has for the last three years 
supplied St. Albert’s two 
medical clinics with the ser- 
vices of a social worker and a 
public health nurse who work 
out of the clinics in co- 
operation with the doctors. 

The project was set up 
with Federal Government 
funds and these will be no 
more at the end of the 
month. 

A brief has been sent to 
the provincial government 
asking for its funding so that 
the service can continue. 
Supporters of the project 
point to its social and medical 
value in the community and 
are very anxious to keep the 
service going. 

During the committee of 
the whole meeting, which 
was attended by Chairperson 
of the St. Albert Social 
Services Board Janet Dahr, 
Councillor Barry Breadner 
agreed with Mayor Dick 
Plain that the project deser- 
ved the attention of council, 
but he wanted to make sure 
that the project was being 


evaluated objectively. 

There seemed alot of en- 
thusiasm that the project was 
worth its salt, but Coun. 
Breadner wanted to know 
what the dollar figure was on 
savings, ‘‘or was this sub- 
jective?” 

It was pointed out that 
data would be available to 
match the project with a 
value in money terms. 

Director of Social Services 
in St. Albert Charles Gale 
says in a letter to council 
‘the basic concern... was 
that with the end of this 
project, a service that has 
become a major supplier of 
family counselling in St. 
Albert, will no longer be 
available to the residents of 
the town. People will have to 
take their problems to coun- 
selling agencies in Edmonton 
and pay as much as $30 per 
hour for this service."’ 

Mr. Gale goes on to say 
the counselling services of 
the two school systems have 
worked closely with the 
service, using it as a prime 
source of referral for children 
showing symptoms of family 
breakdown. 

Supporters of the project 
are hoping that the govern- 
ment will see Allied Health 
services as a useful demon- 
stration of health care 
delivery and come up with 
funds to save it; and, if this is 
Please Turn to Page 2 


Wednesday, March 10, 1976. 


15¢ 


chool sickness 
not deadly gas 


Deadly carbon monoxide 
gas has been ruled out as the 
cause of a mysterious illness 
among some children at the 
Ronald Harvey School this 
week, 

About 12 children and a 
teacher went. down with 
sickness and dizziness sym- 
ptoms at 2:30 p.m. March S 
at the school and some had to 
visit a doctor. 

Superintendent of St. Al- 
bert’s Separate School Dis- 
trict #6 Elmer Gish said 
Tuesday mornthg tests carr- 
ied out in every room in the 
school revealed ‘‘beyond 
doubt there was no carbon 
monoxide in the building."’ 
Mr. Gish emphasized, ‘‘It is 
a ventilation problem.”’ 

There are 17 classrooms at 
the Ronald Harvey School 
and eight of these are 
portables where the sickness 
has been happening. 

Last Friday the sickness 
siruck in the Grade Four 
class. Mr. Gish said odour 
from new rugs which have 
just been put down in the 
school may have been a 
contributory factor to the 
sickness. 

Since the children and 
their teacher became ill, the 
school has been swarming 
with. health officials trying to 
determine the cause of the 
problem. 

Ata special board meeting 
held last Monday night 
portable classroom to pro- 
vide continuous monitoring. 
Also available at the school is 
a portable carbon monoxide 
detector to provide additional 


checking. 

Tuesday there was an 
occupational hygienist still 
carrying out comprehensive 
tests on the health and 
environment conditions at 
the school. The hygienist was 
accompanied by other repre- 
sentatives of the Occupa- 
tional Hygiene Branch of the 
Occupational Health and 
school officials were assured 
that the problem was not 
related to carbon monoxide 
poisoning. 

The board heard reports 
on the heating and ventila- 
tion system of the school 
from the building contractor, 
the mechanical engineer, the 
Sturgeon Health inspector 
and an official of the Gas 
Protection Branch as well as 


a representative for the 
architect. 

Following the meeting the 
board has installed carbon 
monoxide detectors in each 
Safety Division of the De- 
partment of Labour. 

Mr. Gish said the board 
will await the final report 
from the occupational hy- 
gienist and depending on the 
findings Board Chairman Bill 
Webber will decide on open- 
ing the portables Wednesday 
or Thursday. 

Mr. Gish repeated that the 
cause of the illness may well 
be the inadequate circulation 
of air in the portables and the 
variations of heat control. 

Following recommenda- 
iions by the’ engineer, 
Please Turn to Page 2 


Tenders approved 
for Cathoi:t School 


The Board of the St. Albert 
Catholic School District app- 
roved the tenders for the new 
8 x 8 community core school 
io be constructed in the 
Lacombe Park subdivision at 
the regular board meeting 
held on Monday, March Ist. 

Architect George Cheren- 
ko of McIntosh, Workum and 
Cherenko attended the mee- 
ling and presented a report 
on the tenders submitted for 
the Lacombe Park school 
together with his recommen- 
dations. 

The trustees selected the 
iender of Bennett and White 


Western Lid., at a cost for 
the building only of $37.56 
per square foot. Cost of the 
school building only, not 
including landscaping and 
furnishings will be in excess 
of a million dollars, and 
Secretary-Treasurer Ted 
Baldwin advised the Board 

that the complete cost of the 

school, including services, 

landscaping and equipment 

will be in the neighbourhood 

of $43 per square foot. The 

support price (funds made 

available by the Provincial 

Government for school buil- 

Please Turn to Page 2 


Work on Oliver prison 
underway next month 


Construction will start 
early next month on AI- 
berta's first maximum se- 
curity penitentiary, set for a 
site near Oliver four miles 
northeast of Edmonton in the 
MD of Sturgeon. 

Brian Geraghty, deputy 
regional director of the 
Prairie Region of the Cana- 
dian Penitentiary Service 
said March 9 the $12 million 
centre was going ahead 
despite objections by local 
residents. ‘ 

He added that the Federal 
Government had acted in 
good faith spending over 
$300,000 on research and 
planning on the project. 

The centre would be in use 
by June 1978. 

Farmers who live near the 
site for the centre submitted 
a 200 signature petition to 
the MD of Sturgeon and this 
outcry caused a delay of 


several months in construc- 
tion, 

Mr. Geraghty said MD 
councillors were asked three 
limes at a recent meeting if 
they were in favour of the 
centre ‘‘and they said they 


were." 

‘There's absolutely no 
doubt in my mind council 
supports this thing,’’ he 
added. 

Mr. Geraghty admitted 
Please Turn to Page 2 


Opportunity 
for residents 


The Parks and Recreation Board of the Town of St. 
Albert, endeavouring to insure maximum public input 
on recreation facilities, is planning a concentrated 
program of public meetings March 21 - 25. There will 
be opportunities for presentations from organized 
groups as well as public meetings held in the three 
geographical areas of the town for expression of 
individual opinions. Written as well as verbal 
presentations will be welcomed from organized groups 
or individuals. Boards, clubs, lodges and organizations 
are encouraged to prepare proposals for presentation. 
Watch for a detailed schedule of meetings in next 


week’s Gazette. 


; 


le ab ae Sl 


re 


‘ : oe F 
Cont’ Page 1 
the cofincillor on this issue. 

But there was no easy cash 


flow the committee of 
the 4 ‘ 
Th t. Albert Barons 


MidgétHockey Club got 


heating units in the portables 
give out very little carbon 
~ monoxide anyway even if 
‘vents were plugged with 


stow. 

Mr. Gish noted the weath- 
er may have contributed to 
the ‘‘stuffiness’’ at the 
school when. the cold snap 
ended last week. 

» Principal of the Ron 


approval for a trip to Quebec» parvey School Jack Bauman 


but they got $900 of 
$1500 they e asking for: 
And the St. Albért"Mites 
hockey team, who are going 
up to Slave Lake for a 
tournament this weekend got 
$64 to help pay for the 32 
mementoes for the trip. 

The rest of the $16,000 
grant requests were re- 
commended to budget stud- 
ies. Broken down, the 
requests were: $6000 for a 
part time Heritage Officer to 
be employed by the St. 
Albert Historical Society, 
$1000 for a June Quebec trip 
by PITCH and SPICE, a 
request for $525 from the St. 
Albert Lacrosse Association 
to introduce more people to 
the game of lacrosse, $1,000 
for equipment and other 
overheads for St. Albert 
Little League Baseball; $250 
for construction of proper ski 
trails on the Athabasca Uni- 
versity site (requested by the 
St. Albert Nordic Ski Club); 
$5,500 for the Kinsmen 
Club’s $2,000 parade grant 
as well as the $3,500 rain-out 
grant. 

One other positive result of 
the discussions with the 
committee of the whole and 
parks and recreation was that 
St. Albert decided to cough 
up the membership fee to 
join the Alberta Parks and 
Recreation Association. 


deadly 


Cont'd From Page 1 
adjustments will now’ be 


made in the heating and.’ 


ventilation systems, | furnace 
fans will be on continuous 
run, whereas they had been 
on automatic when the 
sickness among children 
broke out. 

‘Fresh air intake adjust- 
ments will be compatible 
with the running of the fan,” 
Mr. Gish stated. 

‘To make (the portables) 
more Satisfactory, there will 
be long range adjustments 
100, which will take a little 
longer,’’ Mr. Gish added. 

He also said that the 


CARPETS AND 
UPHOLSTERY 
STEAM CLEANED 


eWall to Wall Carpets 

*Upholstery clesned in 
your home 

eSoil and Stain Retardent 
Service 

*Anti static spray service 

*Deodorizing 


We do not do 
Telephone Soliciting 


Member A.R.C.A. 
ST. ALBERT'S OWN 


» 
a-BRITE 
CARPET CARE 
459-5820 


_* said all children were out of 
the portable classrooms 
Monday while they were 
being checked. 

However attendance was 
good, said Mr. Bauman, and 
children were diverted to the 
centre core of the school, in 
the library lunch room and 
the gymnasium while the 
tests were going on. 

Mr. Gish pointed out when 
the sickness occurred, chil- 
dren co-operated well when 
asked to line up in the gym, 
and others lined up in the 
school yard, 

Mr. Webber indicated last 
Monday he was not convin- 
ced there was a carbon 
monoxide problem at the 
school, there were a lot of 
factors to be considered. 
However he was leary of 
pinning too much on the psy- 
chological factor as there 
have been too many cases in 
the past of children coming 
home from school suffering 
from headaches, nausea, 
exhaustion, an inability to 
catch breath and fits of 
coughing. 

Also a number of children 
have exhibited symptoms of 
mononucleosis, swollen gl- 
ands and spleens and str- 
ange rashes, according to a 
parent of one of the children. 

Mr. Webber said out- 
breaks of illness have varied 
in the past from between two 
10 three of the portable units. 

He was hopeful that the 
board would get the all-clear 
‘and provide the monitoring 
service 10 make things stay 
OK.”’. “ 


tenders 


Cont'd From Page 1 
dings) is presently $29 per 
square foot, 

The tender will have to be 
approved by the School 
Buildings Branch and the 
Board hopes that the school 
will be completed and ready 
for occupancy by early Fall. 

Trustees were hopeful that 
there might be an increase in 
the support price bul no one 
knew how much of an in- 


——_ > - : Tey 

wee = OF 4 Se 

o@—_fmes 9. # met Sa 

ota REN 

tig a : J \ 
— > - ~ 


ie % ’ ‘rrp ' 
CHINESE & WESTERN 
#25 GRANDIN SHOPPERS PARK 


DAILY SPECIAL 
BUSINESSMEN’S LUNCHEON 


LICENSED 
DINING ROOM 
& TAKE-OUT SERVICE 
Free Home Delivery on Orders of 84° or More 


PHONE 458-1790 — 458-1791 


Pick-up Orders - 10° off on $5.00 or More on Even Dollar 
|Not on Chargex| 


crease the support price 
might be given. 

The Board voted to name 
the new school after Bertha 
Kennedy, a long time teach- 
er in District No. 3 and this 
year’s Citizen of the Year. 
The Lacombe Park School 
will now be known as the 
Kennedy Community Core 
School. 


project 


Cont'd From Page 1 
not successful, that somehow 
the local Preventive Social 
Services or the Health Unit 
could drum up the funds. 
The committee of the 
whole gave their support in 
principle for the project's 
continuance. But with the 
proviso that methods of 
funding be explored, with a 
report coming back to coun- 
cil, 


prison 


Cont'd From Page 1 
however that the Sturgeon 
council had shown reluctance 
\o issue a development 
permit for the centre. But in 
any event, the Federal 
Government could order the 
council to issue the permit. 

The site near Edmonton 
was chosen ‘because many 
of our prisoners come from 
northern Alberta’’ and they 
were being overcrowded in a 
Federal penitentiary in Prin- 
ce Albert, Sask. 

In light of the recent 
escapes from the Fort Sask- 
atchewan Correctional In- 
stitute, Mr. Geraghty said 
the new facility would be 
clearly separated from that 
and it was a maximum 
security facility where the 
escape factor will be almost 
nil. 


SHEEP POTENTIAL 


Although sheep raising 
lacks the glamour and cow- 
boy image associated with 
cattle production, it has 
several advantages over oth- 
er types of livestock pro- 
duction says a research 
scientist at the Agriculture 
Canada Swift Current, Sask., 
Research Station. 

For instance, it’s not 
subject to the boom and bust 
cycles of cattle and hog 
production, he says. 


CUISINE 


ST. ALBERT, ALBERTA. 


19)5)5)5)5)5)5)5)5)5)5)5)S) 


=? cy} Cc) 


Se 


MALL OPEN 


G in 
C1 SES55S55555655555 


?- ST. ALB’ *T & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1976. 


a deadly eight foot long alligator at the Edmonton Boat, 
Trailer and Sport Show March 10 - 14 at the Exhibition 


Grounds. 


Indian to wrestle 
deadly alligator 


James Billie, a Seminole 
Indian from Florida, will 
wrestle a deadly eight foot 
long alligator at the Edmon- 
ion Boat, Trailer and Sport 
Show March 10 thru 14 at the 
Exhibition Grounds. 

The alligator, weighing 
between 150 and 200 pounds, 
will be one of three involved 
in an unique daily demon- 
stration at the show. During 
the educational demonstra- 
tions, naturalist Frank Weed 
will explain interesting de- 
tails about the alligator’s 
lifestyle, personality and 
habits. 

Wrestling an alligator is a 
risky proposition at the best 
of times. "'They've got teeth 
like razors,’ says Mr. Weed. 
“You've gol to know your 
siuff or you'll get sliced up 
like sandwich meat at the 
supermarket.’ 

Mr. Billie is an expert at it. 


He learned the habits of 
alligaiors while growing up 
in the Florida everglades. 
He's manager of the Semin- 
ole Indian Village, a popular 
tourist attraction, and a 
member of the prestigious 
Tribal Council in Florida. 
Frank Weed was featured 
ai last year's boat show with 
his spectacular snake dis- 
play. He has provided and 
irained snakes, frogs, taran- 
iula spiders and alligators for 
a number of-adventure and 
horror movies, including 


**Frogs"’ and ‘‘Stanley."’ 
The eighth annual Boat 
Show, to be held in both the 
Coliseum and Gardens, will 
be open from 6 to. 10:30 p.m. 
on the first two days of the 


five-day run. Friday's and 


Saturday's show will open at 
1 p.m., closing at 10:30, 
while Sunday the doors will 
be open from 1 to 6 p.m. 

li's one of the biggest 
events of its kind in Western 
Canada, ,atiracting 100,000 
visitors. 


Annual Book Fair 
a tremendous success 


Remember the 15,000 
books that were going on sale 
at Sir George Simpson School 
over the weekend? Well, Mr. 


NOTICE 
OF PUBLIC MEETING 


BOARD OF TRUSTEES 


ST. ALBERT SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 3 


The annual Public Meeting of the Electors of the St. 
Albert Public School District No. 3 will be held as 


indicated below: 


WEDNESDAY, MARCH 17, 1976 


AT 8:00 P.M. 


V. J. MALONEY SCHOOL 


65 SIR WINSTON CHURCHILL AVENUE 
ST. ALBERT, ALBERTA. 


Copies of the minutes of the last annual meeting and 
copies of the 1975 Financial Statement can be obtained 
from the undersigned. 


E. A. BALDWIN 


SECRETARY-TREASURER. 


Rod Throndson, principal of 
Robert Rundle School, which 
collaborated with Sir George 
Simpson for the Book Fair, 
phoned the Gazette on Tues- 
day to report that all but a 
very small amount of the 
books went unsold. Mr. 
Throndson went on to say 
that a number of the leftover 
books went into the school 
libraries. He reported that 
the fair had the largest 
turnout ever and that the 
profits doubled over last 
year. 

Both schools would like to 
thank the many people who 
bought books, but a special 
thanks has to go to the many 
parents who gave up a lot of 
their time to come around 
and give a much needed 
hand helping at the fair. 


BINGO 


ST. ALBERT . 
COMMUNITY HALL 


7:30 Every Wednesday 
Three Cards - $1.00 


Bonanza 2 Jackpots 


““He-woman” needed for Fire Dept. 


No (sexual) discrimination 
against female firefighters in 
St. Albert. 

That was the highly un- 
chauvinistic approach of Ma- 
yor Dick Plain at the comm- 
ittee of the whole meeting 
last Monday night as council 
looked at the rules and regu- 
lations for full time and 
volunteer firefighters for the 
St. Albert Fire Department. 

Mayor Plain favours the 
hiring of female firefighting 
personnel in the local Fire 
Department to help solve the 
‘*manpower’’ shortage. But 
looking at a submission from 
Fire Chief C. A. Purnell the 
tests for becoming a member 
are pretty stiff and are 
enough to put any man 
through his paces. 

First of all you have to be 
not less than 21, and under 
30 to join; also you have to be 
al least five feet eight inches 
tall and weigh 150 pounds 
minimum. 

Mayor Plain felt that even 
the police and military didn’t 
have such stiff entrance 
qualifications. Councillor 
Barry Breadner pooh-poohed 
the idea of the 21 years old 


Cycle to 
Olympics 


If you are a keen cyclist, 
read this. 

You could be one of 200 
cyclists heading out to the 
Montreal Olympics in May to 
show Canadian participation 
in the Games. 

You must be over 18 to 
take part in the trip. 
sponsored by the Olympic 
Bicycle Club of Canada. 

Three weeks of the trip will 
be spent at the Olympics. 

The tour then goes on to 
Halifax, N.S., to arrive 
around October 1 with the 
return to Winnipeg by bus. 

Cost of the trip to each 
cyclist will be $400 and will 
include caravan service, 10 
speed bicycle, food and the 
return trip to Winnipeg by 
bus. 

Participants must supply 
their own tent and sleeping 
bag.: 

There is no information to 
hand on exact dates or place 
of departure yet. 

If you want more infor-. 
mation on the tour, contact: 
Olympic Bicycle Club, Box 
3895, Station B, Winnipeg, 
Man. 


YOGA 


ANNETTE HAUPTMAN 
CLASSES START IN 
APRIL, 1976. 


Residence - 459-7072 
Business - 459-7771 


COMPLETE DRIVE 
SHAFT SERVICE 


Spicer 
¢Hayes-Dana 
*Chelsea 


eRetubing 
eBalancing 
*Straightening 


loop 


FOR INFORMATION 
CALL 
McCOY BROS. LTD. 
149 St. & 112 Ave., 
EDMONTON 
403-454-8661 
TELEX 037-2623 


age limit and said ‘‘why 21, 
why not the age of majority, 
for eligibility?’’ 

He also wondered why 
x-rays would be needed for 
the service and also com- 
plained that the press had 
previously missed the signif- 
icance of being clean-shaven 
in the fire service. That was 
so you could wear gas masks, 
the councillor said. 

Others thought that the 


weight, size and age limits 
were discriminatory, since 
there was no correlation 
between actual strength and 
small stature. 

Mayor Plain felt that the 
regulations from the Fire 
Department were against 
council policy. ‘‘This will 
defeat the whole purpose,’ 
he said, ‘‘both sexes will be 
allowed.”’ 

If you want to be a full time 


or volunteer fire fighter with 
St. Albert (man or woman) 
here’s what you face. 

A test of maximum oxygen 
consumption, showing the 
ability to recover from hard 
work, a test for upper body 
strength, a stair run, which 
shows the power output of 
the legs, an ‘‘explosive’’ 
jump test, (the ability of the 
legs to do high workload for 
an extended period of time) 


String Band is back 


” ‘ta 


Hi ‘Swing your partner, 
la main left’’ and ‘‘dos si 
dos’’ right on down to the St. 
Albert Community Hall this 
Friday night for a swinging 
square dance sponsored by 


Helicopter 
landing 
pad 
refused 


There will be no helicopter 
landing pad at Tercier 
Marineland near the St. 
Albert Trail. 

Possible creation of a 
iraffic hazard situation, pro- 
ximity of residential proper- 
iy, buildings and other future 
developments, as well as the 
availability of other airports 
were all cited as reasons 
against the proposed de- 
velopment, 

At the committee of the 
whole meeting last Monday 
night council carried a 
refusal motion from Coun- 
cillor Rod Throndson on the 
helicopter landing pad. 

Tying in with the proposed 
helicopter landing pad de- 
velopment, Councillor Mar- 
garet Smith said she had 
noticed a story in the St. 
Albert Gazette recently ab- 
oul proposed expansion for 
the St. Albert Airport north 
of the Hudson Bay Reserve. 

She said for safety, she did 
not want another major air- 
port in the area. She stated 
she did not want a degree of 
improvements at the St. 
Albert Airport which would 
interfere with air traffic from 
the other three (the Edmon- 
ion Industrial, CFB Namao, 
and the Villeneuve satellite). 


the Edmonton Old Time 
Music and Blue Grass Guild. 
The band will be the well 
known and local Spirit River 
String Band, 

The Guild was formed by 
the Spirit River Band to 
provide good entertainment 
at a moderate price. The 
admission price is $3.00, 
which includes a member- 
ship in the Guild This mem- 
bership means that the 
second performance will be 
available at a reduced rate. 

The Spirit River String 
Band hasn't changed since it 
last visited St. Albert. Paddy 
Byrne, Claire Beaudoin, Pe- 
ter Mitchell, Don Lecki and 
Brenda Morie make up this 


popular group. 

Things will be getting 
underway around 8:30 p.m. 
The Guild has a liquor 
license so refreshments will 
be served along with a light 
lunch later on in the evening. 

For those who are not 
acquainted with this group, 
but enjoy old time and blue 
grass music - be sure to 
attend this square dance on 
Friday night. Those who 
know the group, it’s another 
good time get together. See 
you there. 

Tickets are available at the 
door or in advance by 
contacting either Paddy Byr- 
ne or Alex Merlin at 
458-1483. 


Youville residents 
enthusiastic over dance 


The Ladies Auxiliary of the 
Youville Home hosted a 
dance for the patients. The 
auditorium was beautifully 
decorated for the gala event. 

Music for dancing plea- 
sure was provided by Danny 
Boisvert’s Starlite Band, 
courtesy of the Si. Albert 
Knights of Columbus. Danny 
onthe violin, his daughter 


Joanne at the piano, Bob 
Pompu on guitar, Tony 
Deschenes as vocalist, and 


Jean Paul Roy as guest on 
he accordian. 

Armand Savoie did a really 
vreat job as our genial 
emeee, and his brother Ed 
Savoie, made the evening all 
she more fun, as our lively, 
laughable, lovable clown, 

Many spot dances and 
door prizes were given out. 

Several French vocal sel- 
ections were very pleasing to 
ihe patients. 

Refreshments were served 
during the evening by mem- 
bers of the Auxiliary. 

Following the dance a 
delicious lunch was enjoyed 


St. Albert 


The Town of St. Albert requires an Accounts Payable 


Clerk. 


The successful applicant will be required to maintain 
records on purchase orders, receiving reports and 
vouchers. Also, code and review vouchers for pricing, 
extensions and totals as well as prepare and batch in 
readiness for cheque preparation. 


Previous Accounts Payable experience a necessity. 


Term: Permanent 


Commencement Date: As soon as possible 


Salary Range: $7,271 
Location: Town Hall 


- $9,280 per annum 


’ Closing Date: March 15, 1976. 


Competition #76/13 


Please submit applications quoting the above 
competition number to the Personnel Supervisor, Town 
of St. Albert, Churchill and Grandin, St. Albert, 
Alberta. T8N 0G2. 


by all and everyone agreed 
that the warmth and gaiety of 
this dance had been a great 


success. 

The Ladies Auxiliary ex- 
end their grateful thanks to 
everyone who helped make 
the evening a happy one for 
the patients, 


and finally the agility speed 
run. This test combines both 
speed and agility and is used 
to depict body co-ordination 
at high speeds. 

The fitness test for men 
only, who are full time mem- 
bers of the force is even more 
stringent. 

Just for starters, here is 
what the reporter thought 
was the worst of seven tests: 
The candidate is given a 125 


lb. weight and has to lift it 
from the floor, carrying it 100 
feet without stopping. 

Next worst is when the 
candidate is asked to walk 
the length of a narrow beam 
of wood (on the floor) 
measuring four inches by 20 
feet, and carrying a 25 lb. 
piece of fire hose the length 
of this, without losing bal- 
ance and falling off the 
beam. 


PETERBOROUGH 
SKI SPORT 


OPEN BOW 
C/W 50 H.P. EVINRUDE, CONTROLS AND CALKINS 
BOAT TRAILER. COMPLETE AND READY TO GO. 


SPECIAL $3595.” 


SEE YOU AT THE BOAT SHOW IN THE COLISEUM -- 
MARCH 10th TO MARCH 14th 


MONDAY, TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY ..9 A.M. - 6 P.M. 


THURSDAY AND FRIDAY 
SATURDAY 


184 ST. ALBERT ROAD 
|ON HIGHWAY NO.2 IN ST. ALBERT] 
PHONE: 458-2411 


THE BIG BIG DEAL 
AT THE INN 
TAVERN SMORG 


HIP OF BEEF 


$1.00 


MONDAY TO FRIDAY 11:30 a.m. TO 2:00 p.m. 


ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1976 


“3 


What Caught Our Eye 


By Gazette Staff Writers 


From ARCHITECT OF FREEDOM - 


THOMAS JEFFERSON, by Mike Edwards 


in National Geographic, Feb.1976 


The 33-year-old delegate to the Second Continental 
Congress sought in the Declaration (of Independence) to 
explain ‘‘to the tribunal of the world,’’ Congress's decision 
to break off with Great Britain. Needing neither book nor 
pamphlet, Jefferson tried ‘‘not to find out new principles ... 
but to place before mankind the common sense of the 
subject...”” 


And quoting from the eminent Jefferson scholar, Dr. Dumas 
Malone, interviewed by Mr. Edwards ‘‘A bit shy’’ ... he’d 
have a lot of trouble running for office today... He might not 
be good on TV. So far as I know he never made a political 
speech.’ 


From article entitled RETAILERS 
LAUD SHOPPING CENTRE LULL, by 
Barbara Kennedy in the March Sth 
edition Globe & Mail. 


The lull in the development of shopping centres in Canada, 
following 25 years of mushrooming expansion, has been 
welcomed by several major retailers as the industry enters a 
period of modest growth, stated Barbara. Mr. J. R. 
Davidson, general manager research and planning of 
Simpson Sears Ltd., of Toronto when interviewed noted 
‘that most Canadians have access to shopping facilities 
within a maximum of 10 to 15 minutes driving time from 
their homes, and it is unlikely the industry will try to bring 
more facilities closer to the people in mass markets. Mr. 
Davidson said Simpson's is also scrutinizing its relationship 
with major developers, in an effort to avoid being pressured 
into centres that do not provide an adequate return. 


From article entitled REFUGEES 
FROM OTTAWA: Five Publie Servants 
and Why They Left, by Sandra 

Gwyn in the March edition of the 
Canadian magazine Saturday Night. 


Sandra quotes Hugh Hanson, first with government of. 
Ontario, and then with the Ministry of State for Urban 
Affairs at the senior executive level, who resigned his 
position. ‘*I found discouraging the number of compromises 
you had to make to get things done. You have to do a little 
lying and cheating. You have to play the game.” 


And ‘‘Hug: amounts of-money are spent on hiring 
consultants - and then on hiring other consultants to advise 
you how to get round the first batch of consultants. And 
wasteful. ‘‘In some ways l-was encouraged to waste 
money.”’ The five qualified people who left their posts also 
had some suggestions for change. For example from 
Douglas Hartle, a professor of economics and associate of 
the Institute for Policy Analysis at the University of Toronto. 
He was researc’ ector of the Carter Commission on 
Taxation in the sixties, and from 1969-73 was deputy 
secretary (plaunimyg) to the Treasury Board, the central 
agency that supervises all government spending. Mr. Hartle 
recommended ‘‘As a symbolic gesture, phasing out the 
Ministries of State for Urban Affairs and Science and 
Technology. Freezing the hiring of professionals until, 
through attrition, numbers are reduced very substantially - 
say 25% Now we have too many bureaucrats fighting over 
100 | K. 


From the February 1976 edition of 


the newsletter of Office Overload 


After an accident, one woman rushed out of the gathering 
crowd and started to lean over the victim. She was pushed 
aside by a man who directed, ‘Step back please! I’ve had a 
course in first aid.”’ 


The woman stood and watched the man’s ministrations for a 
few minutes, then tapped him on the shoulder. ‘‘When you 
get to the part about calling a doctor,’’ she said, ‘‘I’m 
already here.”’ 


11 Chronicles 31:21 
And in every work that he began in the service of the 


house of God, and in the law, and in the 
commandments, to seek his God, he did it with all his 
heart, and prospered. 


4. ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, 


Air Cadets plan 


open house 


By F/Sgt. Trevor Cousineau 
The St. Albert Air Cadets 
are in the midst of planning 
activities for the next few 
months which include an 
open house, the annual 
parent-cadet banquet and 
recreational activities such as 
weekend trips to Camp 
Wright and Jasper. 

An open house will be held 
on Thursday, March 25 from 
7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the 
Community Hall on Perron 
Sireet and all parents and 
other interested persons are 
welcome to attend and view 
the displays of cadet activi- 
lies. 

The parent-cadet banquet 
is scheduled for Thursday, 
April 29 and the recreational 
\rips are tentatively planned 
for May and June. 

Of more immediate con- 
cern are the precision drill 
1eam competitions with other 
squadrons in the Edmonton 
area from which the winners 
will advance to the provincial 
finals against the Northern 
and Southern zone finalists. 
Si. Albert's 533 squadron 


MARCH 10, 1976. 


PUBLISHED BY 


WEJ 
Publishing Lid. 


31 Perron Street 


drill team are the defending 
provincial champions. 

Later this month nine male 
and female cadets who were 
nominated by the squadron 
selection were nominated by 
the squadron selection board 
will attend the provincial 
selection boards at CFB 
Penhold with male and 
female cadets from all other 
Alberta squadrons where 
they will compete for flying, 
lcadership, technical, ath- 
Ietic and bush survival 
scholarships which are spon- 
sored jointly by the Canadian 
Forces and the Air Cadet 
League of Canada. 


THE ODDS ARE 
AGAINST YOU 


ST. ALBERT 
ALTA. 


P.O. BOX 263, ST. ALBERT 
SECOND CLASS MAIL 
REGISTRATION NO. 1930 


ERNIE JAMISON 


EDITOR & PUBLISHER 


YEARLY SUBSCRIPTION $7 .°9 BY MAIL 


Phone 458-2240 


‘CHARGE ! 
En Avany /" 


BILLBOARD 


WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10 - 8 p.m. Paul Kane High. 
Siurgeon Toastmistress Club will be holding their regular 
meeting. 

OT ** 
MARCH 11-12-13 - The Neighbourhood Council Steering 
Committee will be on Grandin Mall with questionnaire 
asking residents for their views on recreational and cultural 
concerns. 

** ** ** ** 
FRIDAY, MARCH 12 - Comets at home to Westlock in first 
game of Zone 3 Provincial Playoffs. 

*m kk ** 
SATURDAY, MARCH 13 - Ladies Auxiliary to Sturgeon 
General Hospital presents Nifty Fifties Night, Community 
Hall - 9 p.m. 

** 2K ** ** 
SUNDAY, MARCH 14 - Travel Information Seminar 
sponsored by Canada West Tourist Association. Films and 
information on travel in B.C. Sir George Simpson School - 
7:30 p.m. No charge. Bring the family. Register with Parks 
and Recreation Dept. 459-6601. 

** ** bef ** 
SUNDAY. MARCH 14 - 8 p.m. The French Social Club will 
hold their card party in the lower hall of the St. Albert 
Community Hall. Everyone welcome. 

** ** eK ORK 

MONDAY, MARCH 15 - 8 p.m. St. Matthew's A.C.W. 
meeting at the home of Mrs. Eva Kerslake, 57 Glenhaven 
Crescent. 

** ** #** ** 
TUESDAY MARCH 16. St. Albert Unifarm annual 
meeting wiil be held at the home of Mr. and Mrs, Tony Iseke 
at 8 p.m. All members invited. 


** + # *#* 


TUESDAY, MARCH 16 - Dutch Auction, United Church 
Women, basement of Church at 7:30. Coffee being served. 
Bargains galore. Home baking. 

oe PORE *k 
TUESDAY, MARCH 16 - Nurses Interest Group supper 
meeling at the St. Albert Inn at 7 p.m. 


** aK ** ** 


WEDNESDAY, MARCH 17 - Annual meeting St. Albert 


Catholie School District #3. 
#4 1x ** 1 


SATURDAY, MARCH 20 - 6:30 p.m. Full Gospel 
Businessmen’s Fellowship will hold their monthly meeting 
Club Mocombo. Ticket reservations 459-5378. 

it “6. > ee eh 
MONDAY, MARCH 22.- Annual meeting Landing Trail 
District, Boy Scouts of Canada, covering Beavers, Cubs, 
Scouts and Venturers. United Church - 8:30 p.m. 


Committee has already 
held a public meeting to 
discuss community leagues 
and how they function. 
Members will be on the 
Grandin Mall on March 4, 5 
and 6 and again on March 
11, 12 and 13 with their 


GOOD NEWS 
PARTY LINE 


The Neighbourhood 
Council Steering Commit- 
tee has prepared a ques- 


tionnaire designed to get as 
many as possible view- 
points from residents on 
directions they would like 
to see the town and its 
communities take. The 


questionnaire and hope to 
reach as many people as 
possible. Anyone interes- 
ted in the Neighbourhood 
Council Steering Commit- 
lee may phone 458-0672. 


Taylor to speak to Liberal meeting 


The annual meeting of the 
Liberal Party of Alberta held 
in Red Deer on the weekend 
of February 6 - 8,. 1976, 
resulted in an almost com- 
plete turn-over of the officers 
of the party. Under the new 
chairmanship of Mrs. Sharon 
Carstairs the party promises 
a thorough revitalization of 
the Liberal Party of Alberta. 

~ Mr. Gordon Anton, the 
new full time executive 
director of the provincial 


Liberal Party and Mr. David 
Sheard of the Town of St. 
Albert explained the impor- 
tance of membership drives 
within each constituency. 
These not only provide much 
needed financial resources 
but also a pool of volunteer 
labour. 

Another most important 
result of this convention was 
the passing of an amendment 
to the constitution of the 
Liberal Party in Alberta 
which allows for the esta- 


blishment of district asso- 
ciations with the co-operation 
of the riding in which they 
exist. This amendment will 
make a much more effective 
grass-root representation 
possible. 

In order to provide the 
initiative and guidance for 
the establishment of such 
local Liberal Associations 
within the St. Albert riding, 
and to elect a full Board of 
Officers for this riding, the 
president of the St. Albert 


Optometrists to work on safety 


Local Optometrists joined 
their fellow Doctors of Opto- 
metry from all across Alberta 
in Edmonton last week for 
ihe annual meeting of the 
Alberta Optometric Asso- 
ciation. Two full days of the 
conference were devoted to 
educational seminars on pr- 
aclice management conduc- 
ted by Dr. Robert P. Lavoy of 
New York, an internationally 
recognized educator in this 
field. Dr. Lavoy’s emphasis 
on the human relations 
aspect of the professional 
oplometric practice was ex- 
tremely well received. He 
made a significant con- 
tribution towards improving 
the capacity of optometrists 
1o meet the primary vision 
care needs of their patients 
and their community. 

Among the major business 
items dealt with at the 
Association's annual meet- 
ing on Saturday was a 
unanimous resolution con- 
gratulating Premier Peter 
Lougheed on his recently 
announced decision to give 
industrial health and safety 
high priority in the present 
session of the Legislature. 


Plant 


protein 


Demand is growing for 
plant protein and Canada is 
getting in on the market. 

Canadian manufacturers 
have recently started making 
textured plant protein from 
soybeans as one step to meet 
a growing demand for pro- 
cessed plant products, acc- 
ording to Agriculture Can- 
ada's Food Systems Branch 
in Ottawa. Rapeseed, field 
peas, a high-protein oat and 
alfalfa could soon enter the 
plant protein manufacturing 
scene. 


th 


Individually and as a pro- 
fessional body, optometrists 
have for some time been 
concerned about the problem 
of visual impairment in 
industry and the adverse 
affect on work safety resul- 
\ing from inadequate safety 
vision programs. 

The Optometrists went on 
record as offering the gov- 
ernment the full co-operation 
and support of their pro- 
fession throughout the pro- 
vince in those areas of 
industrial health and safety 
that relate to vision, A 
special industrial vision care 
committee established by the 
Alberta Optometric Asso- 
ciation last year has been 


charged with the respon- 
sibility to develop procedures 
and standards for an indus- 
irial vision care program as 
part of the profession's 
public service. 


ENGAGEMENT 
ANNOUNCEMENT 


INGRAM - HOLDEN 


Mr. and Mrs. Leslie 
Ingram of Penticton, B.C., 
are pleased to announce the 
engagement of their dau- 
ghter Moira to Dennis 
Holden of Calgary. Wedd- 
ing to take place April 17, 
1976 in St. Albert. 


See you at the 


Edmonton Boat, Traile 
& Sport Show 


MARCH 10-14 


EXHIBITION GROUNDS 


GARRY HODGINS 


TRAILER TOWN 


ST. ALBERT 


j YOUR BEE LINE DEALER 
BEE LINE TRAVEL TRAILERS BEE LINE CAMPERS 
BEE LINE MOTOR HOMES 


e 
Overland 
restaurant 


Dining Lounge Licensed Lounge 


Now open to serve our St. Albert friends 


SPECIAL CHINESE FOOD 
TAKE OUT & DELIVERY 


MONDAY THRU THURSDAY 
FRIDAY -- 11A.M. TO 2A.M. 
SUNDAY -- 4P.M. TO 10 P.M. 


Please Drop In And See Us At 
12960 St. Albert Trail 


eee eee eee neers reese eesene 


SATURDAY -- 4P.M. TO 2A.M. 


Phone 454-0667 


11 A.M. TO 12 MIDNIGHT 


HOLIDAYS -- CLOSED 


Constituency, Mr. R. Whea- 
tley, has called an organ- 
izational meeting on March 
22, 1976 at 8 p.m., in the St. 
Albert Inn. The speaker will 
be Mr. Nick Taylor, leader of 


the Liberal Party of Alberta. 

Everybody is urged to 
attend this meeting and to 
help to develop the only real 
alternative for Alberta: the 
Liberal Party. 


WALK WISE 
WITH YOUR EVES 


T's $1.49 DAY AT 


LON. 


Thursday, Friday and Saturday 
March 11th thru 13th 


at our St. Albert store only! 


only 


$1.49 


PLUS 
REFUNDABLE 
DEPOSIT 


* Mix or Match 


0 


Great 


Flavors! 


Love those stubby 10 ounce 
bottles. They occupy less 
space in your fridge and 
they fit in small car 

trunks! 


w\ 


So C’mon Get 


Wore at our 
ST. ALBERT STORE 


17 ST. ANNE STREET 
(Next to New York Steak House) 


lappy Pop reserves the right to limit:the number of cases purchased. 


* 21 Flavors 


— an 


iN ee 
y 
U 


ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1976 -5 


sire 


eae ae 
a fee ee 


Aatts 


ee: 


ST. ALBERT 


113 HEBERT ROAD 
STURGEON PLAZA 
SHOPPING CENTRE 
PHONE: 459-3522 


Canada No !1 


California 


Broccoli 
§.29 ib. 


Canada No. | 
Vine Ripened 


Tomatoes 
large size 


39‘/Ib. 


Fancy red leaf 
Butter and 
Romaine 


Lettuce 
$.29 ea. 


Mangoes 
large size. 


59° ea. 


6 in. 
Tropical 
Plants 


$4.99 ea. 


MON — FRI 
10AM - 9PM 


9AM - 6PM 
SUN 


In his President’s Report 
to the annual meeting of the 
St. Albert Historical Society, 
Mr. Jim Parker said the 
Society adopts the position 
that a major objective is to 
preserve the identity of the 
town. Until 1970, he said, St. 
Albert was the largest town 
in an urban area with 
positive identity, but we 
realize that may be sub- 
merged by the sprawl of 
development. 

Sites and structures are 
disappearing noted Mr. Par- 
ker pointing to the example 
of the Canadian Northern 
Railway Station built in 1909 


and now located at Namao, 
‘‘and there are others.”’ 
*‘Although we have att- 
empted to look after the 
museum,’’ the president 
went on, ‘‘a voluntary group 
can only do so much.”’ The 
Society takes the position 
that in future planning we 
must record the stories of our 
pioneers and also recognize 
that St. Albert needs a 
museum for the community. 
The Society will also seek to 
have future naming of streets 
and subdivisions related to 
the town’s history, will work 
to restore historical struc- 
(ures, and to relate the goals 


ORGANIZATIONAL 
MEETING 


The Liberal Association of the provincial St. Albert 
Constituency has called an Organizational Meeting on 
March 22, 1976 at 8 p.m., in the St. Albert Inn. The 
speaker will be Mr. Nick Taylor, leader of the Alberta 
Liberal Party. Everybody is urged to attend this 
meeting and to help to develop the only real alternative 
for Alberta: the Liberal Party. 


SCRIVEN’S 


AUTO ELECTRIC LTD. 


Carburetors 1, 2 & 4 Barrel 
Alternators 

Generators 

Starters 


Magnetos 


Automotive Parts 
Wholesale 


TUNE-UP SPECIALISTS 


SERVING INDUSTRY, AUTOMOTIVE AND FARM 


Briggs & Stratton 
Tecumseh-Lauson 
Lawn Boy 
Wisconsin 


Warranty, Parts 
Sales and Service 


24 MUIR DRIVE, ST. ALBERT 


hands can get at them. 


GRANDIN 


CENTRE 
459-5815 


148 Grandin Road 


i 


PHONE: 459-5343 


“HELP SAVE A CHILD 
TODAY” 


Although the use of containers that cannot be 
easily opened by childrén has cut 
considerably on accidental poisonings, there are 
still far too many unnecessary deaths and injuries 
caused by carelessness. If every one of us made it a 
point to eliminate just one potential danger, think 
how many more children's lives might be spared. | 

How about checking in your home today to be 
sure that prescriptions and other medicines are out 
of a child’s reach and are away from where little 


OPEN MON. - FRI. -- 9 A.M. -6P.M. 
SATURDAY -- 9 A.M. - 12 NOON 


R PRESCRIPTION 


EMERGENCY PHONES: 


459-7126 -- 459-6501 


down 


of the Society to the needs of 
the community. 

Mr. Parker told the meet- 
ing that since the 1920's the 
log church has been used as 
a museum, and has been the 
responsibility of the Oblates, 
the Town, the Archdiocese 
and the Parish with the 
assistance of the historical 
society. Last summer they 
were able to hire students 
under the provincial STEP 
program to help look after 
the more than 10,000 visitors 
to the museum - one-third of 
whom were from outside 


Alberta. 

He also informed the 
meeting that ‘‘recent meet- 
ings argue well’’ for the 


restoration of Bishops Pal- 
ace, or Grandin House, built 
in 1874. The feasibility of the 
old four-storey structure as a 
museum is now being inves- 
tigated, he said. 

The old Northwest Moun- 
ted Police Barracks, built in 
1888 is now located near the 
Seniors Centre, Mr. Parker 
noted, and the St. Albert 
Chamber and the Midnight 
Twilight Tourist Association 
have offered to ude this as an 
office if it can be restored, 
and we are awailing a 
decision. 

Society members would 
also be meeting with people 
from the Devonian Society 
with respect to upgrading the 
downtown area. He remin- 
ded those present that lists of 
historic names for streets 
and subdivisions would be 
welcomed by Mrs. Venne, 
chairman, and reported that 
the Federal New Horizons 
people have also enquired if 
any of their programs might 
assist the Society. 


He felt that St. Albert 


needs a town history, while 
commending Jim MacGre- 
gor'’s Father Lacombe and 
Father Tardif's account, and 
reported on the workshop for 
interviewing local oldtimers 
set up by Arlene Borgstede, 
and lan Patterson of the 
Provincial Museum, for whi- 


{ch 24 volunteers registered. 
| For this new work the Society 


again depends on volunteers 
as in all areas, especially, 
said Mr. Parker, since the 
departure of Andy Boyer, 
although they did have Mrs. 
Borgstede part time as a paid 
Heritage officer last year. In 
concluding the president 
acknowledged ihe support of 
the town, the province and 


\ ig 
ED DUNIK 


6- ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1976. 


landscaped lot. 


BROS 


5 GREENHILL STREET 


HAZELDENE EVANS -- 459-6686, 458-1863 


» REALTY LTD. 


the parish and thanked all 
the volunteers who work and 
endeavour to .keep our past 
and our identity. 


TREASURER’S REPORT 


Mr, Gordon Unger repor- 
ted that the Society had 
$9,072.42 in cash on hand 
and in the bank at the end of 
1974, a good portion of which 
was in reserve for specific 
projects. For the past two 
years, he told the meeting, 
we have used the program 
budgeting approach, Over 
$10,000 has been committed 
lo projects: the restoration of 
the NWMP barracks, the 
RCMP centennial project of 
assembling tapes, slides and 
written material for use in 
local schools, a restoration of 
photos project begun in 
December, the operation of 
the museum and others. 

For two years we have 
added funds to the fund for 
moving the log chapel which 
the parish requires to be 
moved in connection with 
their building expansion, he 
said. The site was not the 
original site of the chapel in 
any case, Mr. Unger noted, 
and the move will have to be 
arranged this summer. Whi- 
le the reserve is al present 
sizeable, it is committed, 


Historical Society reviews goals 
and progress at annual meeting 


said the treasurer and the 
actual annual operation is 
close. Revenue sources in- 
clude the Province at $5200, 
the Town at $5,000, mem- 
bers fees (170 members), 
donations made at the 
museum, the sale of booklets 
and interest on reserve 
funds, totalling $21,000 for 
the past year. In conclusion 
Mr. Unger stated that the 
auditor’s certification of his 
report was available for in- 
spection. 


NEW EXECUTIVE 


Election of officers con- 
cluded the business of the 
annual meeting with Arlene 
Borgstede as nominating 
chairman and Bob Russell 
conducting the election. Ex- 
eculive officers are Jim 
Parker, re-elected president, 
Bill Oakes, vice-president; 
Rita Frost, re-elected sec- 
retary and Gordon Unger, 
re-elected treasurer. Mem- 
bers at large on the executive 
are Jane McCracken, Frank 
Turek and Mr. Kurich. 

The four ex-officio mem- 
bers are Mrs. Bertha Kenn- 
edy, Parish rep., Father 
Holland, Archdiocese rep., 
Father Drouin, Oblates rep. 
and Mayor Plain, Town of St. 
Albert representative. 


Plan your summer 
vacation now 


Like to travel? Ever been 
10 British Columbia? Here’s 
your chance to find out what 
your neighbour to the west 
has to offer vacationers. On 
March 14 at 7:30 p.m., at Sir 
George Simpson School the 
Canada West Tourist Asso- 
ciation will be presenting an 
evening of films and infor- 
mation on areas to visit and 
things to do in B.C. 

Three films will be shown; 
one of the Caribou-Chilcotin 
region, another follows the 
Yellowhead Highway thr- 
ough B.C., and the third 
explores the activities avail- 


able such as houseboating, 
fishing and guest ranches. 

Questions will be an- 
swered and information pro- 
vided by resource people 
from the Association. Any 
recreational topics brought 
forward will be dealt with by 
experienced and knowledge- 
able people. 

If you plan to attend please 
contact Parks and Recreation 
al 459-6601 and register. The 
program is free but Parks 
and Rec. would like to have 
an estimate of the number 
who will be attending. 


Express your needs 


at Grandin Mall 


On Thursday, Friday and 
Saturday of last week the 
Neighbourhood Council St- 


HOME OF THE WEEK 


oes i*, 
iy 


4 


Executive Bi-Level - 2000 sq. ft., Features gas jet 
fireplace in family room, 4 Bedrms., 3 Bathrms., Dble. 
Garage with automatic door opener, Professionally 


eering Committee had a 
display in Grandin Mall to 
provide information and get 
public input about communi- 
ty and individual needs. The 
group had prepared 500 
questionnaires which cover- 
ed the areas of: general 
programs needed, kinds of 
organizations, functions of 
an organization, area that the 
organization should serve. 

The group will be at 
Grandin Mall again this 
weekend, Thursday to Satur- 
day. If you are concerned and 
want to help in the planning 
of this facility, drop in and fill 
out a questionnaire. 


BINGO 


WELLINGTON PARK 
HALL 
135 Ave. - 132 St. 
TUESDAY - 7:45 P.M. 
3 Cards - $1.00 
BONANZA - 2 JACKPOTS 


Seniors should mark Fri- 
day, April 2 on_ their 
calendars right now so they 
won't forget! That’s the date 
of the next social evening at 
the Recreation Centre (north 
of the curling rink). 

These socials are held on 
the first Friday of each 
month and already they’re 
proving popular, 

On Friday, March S, Mr. 
Laplante had arranged for 
the showing of two films 
from the National Film Board 
and these were followed by 
square dancing in which 
people were free to join - or 
sit out, according to their 


Newcomers 


Older people keep up busy pace 


fancy. Mr. Lafrance and Mr. 
Elie Bergevin were the 
callers. Lunch was served 
and a good time was had by 
all, 

The Kinsmen Club spon- 
sor bingo which is held every 
other Tuesday evening at 7 
p.m. in the Centre. Cards are 
25¢ each and the prizes can 
be anything up to $8.00. The 
winners on Tuesday, March 
2 were Bernie Vaugeois, 
Louise Cunningham, Zaida 
Reimer, Marguerite Akins, 
Ellen Liptak, Helen Hodg- 
son, Mary Flynn, Mrs. 
Lema, Dorothy Newman, 
Lawrence Kemps, Ralph 


celebrate 


10th anniversary 


The Welcome Wagon 
Newcomers Club of St. 
Albert celebrated its 10th 
anniversary in grand style on 
Tuesday, March 2 at the St. 
Albert Community Hall. 

Approximately 200 mem- 
bers, past members and 
guests enjoyed a delicious 
supper catered by Trio 
Catering. An anniversary 
cake in the design of the 
figure 10 was specially baked 
for the event. 

Mrs. Laverna Quinn, club 
president, welcomed every- 
one to this special meeting. 
Past presidents and execu- 
live members were asked to 
stand and be recognized for 
their years of office. 

Councillor Myrna Fyfe and 
Mrs. Pauline Fleck, director 
of Nursing from the Sturgeon 
General Hospital, both gave 
short speeches. Mrs. Fyfe 
spoke about the major role 
that the Newcomers Club has 
played in the growth and 
fulfillment of the community. 
She paid tribute to the club's 
contribution to St. Albert and 
expressed the hope that each 
newcomer will come to love 
the community as she and 
her family do. 

Mrs. Fleck told the mem- 
bers how much the hospital 
appreciated past donations 
and she mentioned the var- 
ious pieces of equipment 
purchased through donations 
by the Newcomers Club. 


Adults $5.00 


FRIDAY — 5P.M. TO 9 P.M. 


After the speeches, all 
past presidents were asked 
\o go backstage where they 
were provided with clothing 
\o put on for a skit entitled 
The Housewife."’ Such lad- 
ies as June Givens, Angela 
Breadner, Bunnie Ferguson, 
Barb O'Connor and Jane 
Nelson displayed acting tal- 
ents hitherto unknown. 

ll was a great evening and 
the hard working gals who 
arranged it all deserve 
recognition. Good luck New- 
comers for your next 10 
vears! 


NOW AT 


KINGS COURT 
BARBERS & 


118 KINGSWAY GARDEN MALL 
EDMONTON, ALBERTA. 


PHONE: 474-0268 


Bergevin, Ben Morin, Louis 
Leff. Dorothy Newman also 
won the door prize. The next 
bingo will be held on March 
16 at 7 p.m. 

An impressive number of 
miscellaneous articles are 
being collected for the sale 
which is being planned for 
sometime next month. Do- 
nations of new or used 
household articles and cloth- 
ing will be gratefully re- 


ceived at the Centre when 


it’s open or by any member 
of the Senior Citizens Club. 

The ladies are very busy 
crocheting, knitting, basket- 
weaving and quilting. Wed- 
nesday afternoons find them 
at the Cenire busy at 
whatever craft they’re work- 
ing on. Anyone who would 
like to help should go along 
any Wednesday afternoon at 
1:30 p.m. All materials are 
supplied and whatever is 
produced will be sold at the 
sale. 

Thursday is the day for 
meals-on-wheels when a 
number of hot lunches are 
delivered at.the Centre. Any 
senior citizens who would 
like to have an occasional 
Thursday lunch at the Centre 
or anyone who knows a 
**senior’’ who would benefit 
from such a meal should 
phone Hettie Blades at 
459-4756 or Pat Gray at 
459-7476. 

Whist is played on alter- 


HAIRSTYLISTS _ag\” Jap 


BERNIE VENESS 
[formerly of Grandin Park 
Barbershop & Beauty Salon] 


WELCOME ALL FRIENDS TO VISIT KINGS COURT 


OPEN SIX DAYS A WEEK 
APPOINTMENTS WELCOME 


nate Tuesday afternoons. On 
Tuesday, March 9 the win- 
ners were Marguerite Akins 
and Sam Liptak with conso- 
lation prizes going to Maur- 


|CLOSED EVERY DAY 


MEET OUR NEW CHEF 
RELAX AND ENJOY OUR BUFFET 


SUNDAY — 4 P.M. TO 8 P.M. 


THE NEW 


NORTHGATE 
MOTOR INN 


ST. ALBERT TRAIL AT 140th AVENUE 
PHONE: 459-4421 


Branch. 


Children Under 10 - $2.50 


20 GRANDIN SHOPPERS PARK, ST. ALBERT, ALBERTA. 


Children under 5 - Free 


PIZZA SHOP LTD. ( 


ice Vaugeois and Antoinette 
Leblanc. The next card party 
will be held on Tuesday, 
March 23 at 1:30 p.m. 

All seniors are reminded of 


A VERY WARM 


WELCOME 


to our New Members from 


ST. ALBERT 


With the official amalgamation of Edmonton Savings and Credit Union Ltd., and St. 
Albert Savings and Credit Union, we can now offer the residents of St. Albert the many 
services available to our other members: 


* Life Insured Savings 
* Blue Chip Savings - 744% per yr. 
* Chequing 
* Term Deposits - 9 - 10% per yr. 


* Home Ownership Plan 


* Ist & 2nd Mortgages 


%* Longer Hours - 
Tuesday & Wednesday...9:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. 
Thursday & Friday.........9:30 a.m. - 8:00 p.m. 


eee ee eee errr reer eeeeeeeeeee 


eeeeeee 


the drop-in evenings at the 
Centre - Mondays and Wed- 
nesdays from 7 -9 p.m. Meet 
old friends - and make new 
ones. 


* Registered Retirement Plan 


Saturday..........sceeseeeee. 9200 a.m. - 1:00 p.m. 


3:00 - 3:45 p.m.] 


Open House 


We'd like you to come in and join us for a coffee anytime from March 9 to 20. It's a 
chance for us to meet you and an opportunity for you to learn a bit more about ESCU's 
services. On March 12, some of the members of your new Board of Directors will be on 
hand to talk to you and hear some of the concerns of the members of our new St. Albert 


EDMONTON SAVINGS 
& CREDIT UNION LTD. 


11 St. Anne Street 


Ph. 458-1331 


TELEPHONE: 459-4659 


ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1976 


ae 


mes: 
a ae 


~ GET RIED: : PRSE 


mes 


DeLuxe Champion 


RADIAL 


GR78-14 & 15 


95 


FR78-14 
Whitewall 
Installed 


DeLuxe Champion 


POLYESTER 


SIZE 


F78-14 


F78-14 


G78-14 & 15 


BLACK WAL 
PRICE 


C&D 78-14 


$27.50 


TAXATION 


Q. The Family Allowance 
cheques received for our 
children are made out to my 
wife. Does this mean she 
must report the payments as 
income? 

A. Not necessarily. The 
law requires that the indivi- 
dual who claims a personal 
exemption on behalf of a 
child for whom the payments 
are received must report the 
payments as income. If 
neither parent claims an 
exemption, the person to 
whom the cheques are made 
oul must report the income. 
For further information, re- 
fer to Lem 7 of the Income 
Tax Guide provided with 
your income tax return. 

Q. My employer pays me 
an allowance to cover my 
*oard and room while lam 
working al distant work sites 
away from my ordinary place 
of residence where | support 
my wife and family. Pre- 
viously. | was told that this 


February, 1976. 


had to be included in income 
for income tax purposes 
because I was not a con- 
struction worker. I under- 
stand that this no longer 
applies. Is this correct? 

A. Yes. This exempting 
provision now applies to all 
workers employed at a 
distant work site providing 
ihey meet the other nec- 
essary conditions. 

Q. My wife has interest 
from bonds that I purchased 


for her in her name. Is this 
interest considered to be my 
wife s income? 

A. The interest is your 
income because you pur- 
chased the bonds from your 
funds. The same rule would 
apply to dividends on shares, 
inlerest on savings accounts 
and so on. It is the person 
who had the money to invest 
who must report the income 
earned. 

Q. My wife and I are both 


Tax talk from Revenue Canada 


retired. She receives the Old 
Age Security Pension, When 
Iam making out my income 
tax return and claiming my 
wife, must I include the Old 
Age Security Pension as part 
of her income? 

A. Yes. The Old Age 
Security Pension as well as 
any supplement received are 
her income and must be 
taken into account in deter- 
mining the amount, if any, of 
your married exemption. 


What’s on in the city 


Following are some of the 
cultural events you can take 
in in the Edmonton area this 
month. 


EDMONTON 
ART GALLERY 


March 11 - Guitar duo 
featuring Peter Higham and 
Jacob Solomons. 


THE LIQUOR LICENSING ACT 


PUBLIC NOTICE 
OF 
APPLICATION FOR CLUB LICENCE 


Public notice is hereby given that the Royal Canadian 
Legion, Branch No, 271 intends to apply to The Alberta 
Liquor Control Board for a club beer licence (club liquor 
licence) to sell beer by the glass or open bottle (to sell 
liquor by the glass) to members thereof for 
consumption on the following described premises: 


ROYAL CANADIAN LEGION, BRANCH NO. 271 
ST. ALBERT, ALBERTA 
LOT E BLOCK 2 PLAN NO. 762-0139 


Objections to this application shall be made forthwith to 
The Alberta Liquor Control Board, Edmonton. 


Dated at ST. ALBERT, Alberta, this 25th day of 


March 13 - (jazz) Blizzard, 
with Rick Tait, trumpet; Earl 
Seymour, saxophone; Adrian 
Chornowol, piano; John Ser- 
eda, bass, and Tom Doran, 
drums. 

Jazz concerts at the 
Gallery will be held every 
second Saturday during 
March and April at 2:30 p.m. 


EDMONTON CENTRE 


March 8 - 13 The 
Edmonton Art Gallery's Ex- 
tension Service will present 
two exhibitions. The first is 
entitled ‘‘Edmonton Entran- 
ces’’ and features painted 
doorways, an exuberant liv- 
ing folk art which flourishes 
in many of Edmonton's older 
neighbourhoods. 

The other show is ‘*Profile 
of the Edmonton Art Gall- 
ery’’ and is a photographic 
exhibit by Doug Clark, which 
describes the range of activi- 
lies undertaken by the 
Gallery. . 


EDMONTON 
PUBLIC LIBRARY 


March 12 - famed anthro- 


pologist Evelyn Reed will 
speak on topics relevant to 
women such as ‘‘ls Biology 
Women’s Destiny?’’ and 
‘‘Women’s Evolution and 
Human Nature.’’ The lecture 
will be held in the Central 
Library Theatre. 

March 8-13 - the Chil- 
dren’s Division of the Ed- 
monton Public Library will 
present a book display of 
German language books for 
children. 

This will be in the Ed- 
monton Room of the Central 
Library. 

March 13 at 8 p.m., in the 
Central Library Theatre the 
Registered Music Teachers’ 
Association will be presen- 
ling an evening of musical 
entertainment with singing 
and piano and violin playing. 
Admission is free. 

Also March 13 the science 
fiction film THX 1138 will be 
presented. 

March 14 the award 
winning film West Side Story 
will be shown. : 

Both films will start at 2 
p.m. and admission is free. 


STANLEY R. WINTER 
SECRETARY. 


SPECIAL NOTICE TO 
CONDOMINIUM OWNERS! 


TRADE-UP TO A NEW HOME 
IN AKINSDALE ST. ALBERT 


Blackwall 


Installed 


WHITEWALLS $3.00 MORE 


H78-14815 | $30.50 


DeLuxe Champion 


B& C 78-14 $34.95 


Your first step to purchasing a new home, was a 17 NEW HOMES TO 
95 Condominium ‘‘which has been a wise investment.’ CHOOSE FROM IN 
NOW use this EQUITY and PURCHASE a New Home AKINSDALE, 
F78-14 through our Trade-In Plan. ST. ALBERT 
Wittowsll STAGE 111 
sacs AND SUBJECT TO PRIOR 
SALE 


SHOW HOME AT 
9 AKINS DRIVE 


ST. ALBERT 458-2277 


ore 
OPEN 
ke -9 p.m. 
WEEKDAYS 
I p.m. - 5 p.m. 


4 


ST. ALBERT 
TIRE ““=@ 


ST. ALBERT RD. & BELLEROSE DR. 


PHONE 
458-2200 


™ WE DO 
TUNE UPS " 


8. ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1976. 


WEEKENDS 


BRENT HODGINS 
GARRY HODGINS 


A LIFETIME OF TOTAL LIVING 


ZS 
UALICO 
10407-107 AVE. 426-6990 


Me 


Parks and Rec Board meeting 


BOY SCOUTS OF CANADA 
LANDING TRAIL DISTRICT 


The St. Albert Parks and 
Recreation Board met on 
Wednesday, March 3 at 
Town Hall Annex. Those in 
attendance were: Chairman 
L. Wood, Mayor R. H. M. 
Plain, Councillors Throndson 
and Wetsch, Mrs. E. Bakker, 
Mrs. B. Munro, Mr, G. Jay- 
cocks, Mr. D. Bjornson, and 
Mr. B. March. Mr. K. Foster 
was absent. 

The possibility of St. 
Albert acquiring a tier two 
team brought responses from 
several board members. The 
availability of adequate ice 
time for present users was 
discussed. Those who pre- 
sently have demands for ice 
time include: St. Albert 
Standard Generals, St. Al- 
bert Junior Bruins, St. Albert 


Comets, and the St. Albert 
Men’s House League. It was 
moved by Mr. Jaycocks that 
all concerned parties, in- 
cluding the representatives 
of the tier two team, be 
contacted for a meeting with 
the Parks and Recreation 
Board and that a written 
proposal be received des- 
cribing their needs for the 
upcoming year. 

Council had previously 
requested that the Board 
recommend a mechanism for 
the submission of minority 
reports, in the interest of 
hearing all viewpoints on any 
matier. The Board decided to 
recommend the use of 
Robert's Rules of Order 
when relating to minority 
reports. 


Mrs. Munro moved ‘‘That 
momentos of the Town of St. 
Albert be purchased for 
travelling teams or individ- 
uals representing the Town, 
for purposes as may be 
required.’’ These momentos 
would be in the form of 
plastic pins with the Town 
Crest on it. It was later 
moved that the value be 
limited to $64.00. 

The future development of 
Big Lake generated a lengthy 
discussion at the meeting. 
Mayor Plain pointed out that 
Big Lake and the surround- 
ing land had a large potential 
for development as a recrea- 
lion area serving Edmonton 
and nearby communities. 

The zoning of the area 
around Big Lake was ex- 
amined carefully. The mayor 


Al Garvin retiring — 


as Scout Commissioner 


Mr. Al Garvin is retiring as 
district commissioner for 
Landing Trail District, Boy 
Scouts of Canada, after five 
years of service. 

However, Mr. Garvin, who 
has been involved with 
Scouting for almost 20 years 
is not abandoning the move- 
ment. On the contrary he is 
going to use his considerable 
experience and ability in the 
area of adult training, which 
he sees as a growing need in 
scouling, in order to ensure a 
sufficient supply of leaders. 

As Mr. Garvin sees it there 
is no reason thal a person 
interested in Beaver, Cub, 
Scout or Venture units to 
have a personal background 
in scouting. In fact, he 
observed, this might some- 
limes be a disadvantage, as 
those of us who have come 
up from boyhood may be 
inclined to look back too 
often to ‘*how we did things 
in.the old days.’’ Anyone 
with an interest in scouting 
and a desire to assist, usually 
parents who have boys 
involved, can be given a 
iraining program which will 
give them confidence to 
begin. As they gain exper- 
ience, we would then hope 
the new leaders would con- 
iribute some new ideas into 
leadership and programs. 

Mr. Garvin hopes to arr- 
ange one. weekend adult 
iraining session before the 
end of the current season in 


from one whole sale. 


June, and then plans to 
outline and schedule a train- 
ing calendar, laid out as to 
events and topics. 

One of the highlights this 
year for Landing Trail Dis- 
trict was the semi-wilderness 
camp held during the sum- 
mer at Island Lake, when 
every scout troop and every 
cub pack in the district were 
involved. 

Mr. Colin Ford will be 
taking over from Al as 
district commissioner follow- 
ing the annual meeting of the 


district on March 22. 

Both Mr. Ford and Mr. 
Garvin are planning to attend 
a meeting on scouting for the 
handicapped to be held in 
Calgary in May. This is an 
area in which Mr. Ford has 
been serving for some time. 

About 450 boys are in 
Beavers, Cubs, Scouts and 
Venturers in Landing Trail 
District, some 410 of them in 
Si. Albert, about 30 in 
Morinville and a few in 
Wesilock. 


Controversial play 


George Bernard Shaw's 
Mrs. Warren's Profession” 
will be coming up next at the 
Citadel Theatre February 
28th. 

Ii will run till April 3. 

There are some interesting 
fooinotes to this play. 

Although it was written in 
1893. i1 did not reach the 
siage till 1902, presented 
privately in London, Eng- 
land. 

But it was banned by the 
censor and public perfor- 


mances where prohibited till 


1925, 

When it was first per- 
formed in America, at the 
New Haven theatre in Con- 
necticut in 1902, the play was 
closed by the police the same 
evening. 

The play immediately mo- 
ved to New York, where the 
whole cast was arrested, 
charged with disorderly con- 
duct and then released on 
bail. 


“ WE CARE” 


ST. 
143 ST. ALBERT TRAIL 


ALBERT 66 


459-8650 - 459-8286 


WALLPAPER CLEAROUT 
SAVE - ONLY $4.° SINGLE ROLL 


We have purchased and are clearing the total stock of one line of discontinued wallpaper 


MANY, MANY CHILDREN’S PATTERNS 


SCRUBBABLE 
PREPASTED 


DRY STRIPPABLE 
VINYL COATED 


St. Albert Decorating Ltd. 


pointed out that the present 
zoning of the area between 
Sir Winston Churchill Ave- 
nue and the C.N. tracks was 
probably better than any 
other. The present zoning is 
for light industry and if 
strictly enforced it should not 
prove as objectionable as 
other zoning alternatives. 

The future prospects of the 
sewage lagoons was briefly 
mentioned. 

The mayor pointed out that 
the lagoons were owned by 
the town and the long range 
plan for developing this area 
had unlimited possibilities. 

The upcoming Parks and 
Recreation Conference in 
Grande Prairie will provide 
an excellent opportunity for 
representatives from the 
surrounding areas to meet 
informally for the purpose of 
exploring mutual concerns 
about Big Lake. The results 
of this meeting could deter- 
mine whether or not a 
committee composed of rep- 
resentalives from Parkland, 
Sturgeon and the town will 
be formed. 

A three person committee, 
comprised of Mr. Jaycocks, 
Mr. Wood and Mrs. Munro, 
was nominated to act as a 
Recreation Facility Commit- 
tee. This committee is to 
submit to council an outline 
of the procedure recom- 
mended for the gathering of 
public opinion concerning 
the development of future 
recreation facilities. 

The reporter left shortly 
before 11:00 p.m., and the 
meeting continued until 
11:35 when Mr. Wood moved 
that it be adjourned. 


ANNUAL MEETING 


MARCH 22ND 


UNITED CHURCH 


8:30 PM 


BEAVERS - CUBS - SCOUTS - VENTURERS 
THESE ARE YOUR BOYS! 


RUSTIC 
CEDAR 
PANELLING 


Ideal for your 
Basement Project 


1x8 Channel Groove 
Utility Grade 


18° lin. ft. 


1x6 Channel Groove 
Utility Grade 


14° lin. ft. 


BUILDING 


PRODUCTS LTD. 


ECONOMY 


SPRUCE 
STUDS 
45° ea. 


JUST ARRIVED 


1 x 6 Select Tight 
Knot Cedar 
Tongue & Groove 


KILN DRIED 


38° lin. ft. 


14605-123Ave. 


452-9130 


Open All Day Saturday 


BAZAAR 


HOME BAKING 
HANDI CRAFTS 


MARCH I1, 
12, 13 


a gO IO ge 


or | 
459-6268 SHOPPING CENTRE 


| 156 STREET and 87 AVENUE, 
“WE PUT IT ALL TOGETHER - EDMONTON, ALBERTA 
FLOORING, DRAPES, WALLPAPER, PAINT” 


- 
iiceiadaanncs 


14 Perron St. 


ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10. 1976 -9 


ne . 


Citizens respond to questionnaire on gov't policy 


Last September Marcel 
Lambert, MP for Edmonton 
West, distributed a ques- 
tionnaire among his consti- 
tuents to get public input on 
several vital matters. 

47,000 questionnaires we- 
re distributed throughout the 
area and 7,287 (15%) were 
returned. The following indi- 
cates how the majority of this 


ZN 


ay 


} 


GE From 


Hall, St. Albert. 


April S, 1976 at 7:45 p.m. 


public hearing. 


Town of 
St. Albert 


NOTICE 
OF PUBLIC HEARING 


Please be advised that the Council of the Town of St. 
Albert proposes to pass Bylaw No. 2/76 being a bylaw 
to rezone Lot 4, Block 1, Plan 276 K.S., as shown on the 
attached map, from Development Control (DC) to 
Single Family Residential (R1b) and Park (P). 


'DC' To 'P' 


The proposed Bylaw No. 2/76 may be examined 
between the hours of 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. weekdays 
at the office of the Municipal Secretary in the Town 


A public hearing on the proposed bylaw will be held in 
the Council Chambers, Town Hall Annex, on Monday, 


Written representations concerning the manner in 
which any provision of the proposed bylaw may affect 
him will be received by the Municipal Secretary until 
12:00 noon on Friday, April 2, 1976. Persons wishing to 
make oral representation may do so by appearing at the 


MUNICIPAL SECRETARY. 


group felt on the matters 
presented in the question- 
naire. 

On the question of capital 
punishment 76% (5574) of 
those who responded were in 
favour of having the death 
penalty applicable to anyone 
convicted of pre-meditated 
murder, murder for personal 
gain, or murder resulting 


from a crime of violence such 
as armed robbery, rape, etc., 
without a distinction as to the 
victim. 

The introduction of tighter 
gun controls were favoured 
by 80% (S853) of the res- 
pondents, This positive res- 
ponse was in agreement to 
the following statement on 
the questionnaire: ‘‘Federal 
iaw requires the registration 
of all hand guns and auto- 


Melton Master Salesman 


A Member of the Company Top Ten for February 
Si. Albert's Top Producer for February 
AN OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENT. 


Geoff's success and.that of A. E. LePage Melton’s has 
been largely due to you, the discerning public who 
recognizes our No. 1 asset, SERVICE. 


BUS. 459-5595 


PLENTY OF ROOM 


GEOFF BROWN 
Member of Melton's Top Ten in 1974, 
Multiple Listing Service Million Dollar Club 


GEOFF BROWN would like to thank all his clients who 
have made these achievements possible. 


To get SERVICE! Call GEOFF BROWN 
139 Sturgeon Plaza 
WE TAKE HOMES IN TRADE 


'@ E. LePAGE j 


matic weapons. The Ontario 
government proposes to lic- 
ense the purchase of ALL, 
guns (including hunting and 
target) and ammunition. 
Licenses would be issued to 
persons passing standards of 
gun control and safety-hol- 
ders of present hunting 
licenses qualifying automati- 
cally. All licenses would b 

revokable and would b 

withheld from those persons 


RES. 458-1002 OR 
458-1003. 


who are mentally ill, alcoho- 
lic, addicted to drugs, or 
known to be criminals.”’ 

Of those responding to the 
questionnaire, 73% (5366) 
felt that the federal and 
provincial governments are 
not providing a satisfactory 
degree of law, order, and 
personal safety. 

To the question, ‘‘Do you 
think the government of 
Canada should establish a 
comprehensive system of 
wage, profit, rent and price 
controls - now?’’, 59% (4343) 
answered ‘yes,’ - ‘‘only in 
the future if things get 
worse?’’, 18% (1369) an- 
swered ‘yes.’ 

The question of guaran- 
teed annual income was also 
on the questionnaire. 52% 
(3828) felt that ‘‘a RELA- 
TIVE amount which will 


always cover the vital neces- 
sities but will also increase if 
the average income level or 
living standard of the general 
population increases,’’ was 
necessary. 

People were in favour of 
prohibiting the ownership of 
any land or the long-term 
leasing of crown land in 
Alberta by non-residents of 
Alberta or Canada, by cor- 
porations controlled outside 
of Alberta, whether by 
Canadians or foreigners, or 
by Canadian subsidiaries of 
foreign controlled corpora- 
tions, 

Over half the returns were 
against the increase in size of 
the federal government and 
its greater involvement in 
areas traditionally reserved 
for the private sector. 


Paul Kane school 


invites input 
from parents 


The teachers and admini- 
strators of Paul Kane High 
School have set up a com- 
mittee designed to study and 
make recommendations on 
issues that are of concern to 
us in the school. Some of the 
issues that have been or will 
be discussed are: vandalism, 
attendance, credit loads, 


ANNUAL 
MEETING 


OF 
ST. ALBERT 


UNIFARM 


will be held at the home of 
MR. & MRS. TONY ISEKE 
TUES., MARCH 16th 
AT 
8:00 P.M. 


ALL MEMBERS INVITED 
TO ATTEND 


STOVE & FRIDGE 


For a double garage behind this beautiful 
professionally landscaped,. two year old 
bungalow. Existing 9% mortgage. 1300 
sq. fi. Asking only $67,000.00. Call TIM 
EBY at 426-5880, Ext. #569. 


LARGE FAMILY? 


Spacious bi-level backs on treed ravine, 
Five bedrooms, three baths, double front 
drive garage. Sundeck. $81,900.00. 
Please call MARG SEXSMITH at 
458-1802. 


AN EVEN BETTER BI 


Is this S bedroom bi-level, price reduced 
10 $79,900.00. Over 2000 sq. ft. finished 
and featuring rumpus room with bar, 
Attached double garage. Call RALPH 
STRAND at 973-6711. 


STARTING OUT? 


Try this lovely 1392 sq. ft. Townhouse on 
large end lot. Features L.R., D.R., 
kitchen, 3 bedrooms, and 3 bathrooms. 
Seeing is believing at $54,300.00. Call ED 
SCHULTZ at 454-8726, 


10 -ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1976. 


Included on this 1000 sq. ft. bungalow. 
Basement developed with rumpus room 
and | bedroom. Home in excellent 
condition. Asking $59,700.00. Call JUNE 
GIVENS at 459-7910. 


TRY THIS 


3 bedroom bungalow with attached 
garage, developed basement with 2 
bedrooms, rumpus room and bathroom. 
Situated on large lot. Asking $63,500.00. 
Call BONNIE DEVITT at 458-1046, 


TOP VALUE 


On this beautiful 4 level split with family 
room with fireplace on third level. L.R., 
D.R., and kitchen have lovely pine and 
cedar ceiling. Call DON ADAM at 
923-2648. 


10 PERRON STREET 
ST. ALBERT 
PHONE: 459-4461 


MANAGER; ROD SABOURIN 


communication, supervision, 
examinations, smoking, new 
cafeteria, and extra curri- 
cular activities. 

We feel that you, the 
parent and the ratepayer, 
should be consulted on these 
matters and that your input 
would be helpful to us in 
making policy recommenda- 
lions. It is hoped that by 
combining the opinions and 
ideas of parents, students 
and educators that more 
meaningful and relevant 
policy decisions can be 
made. 

We invite parents to 
submit their names to the 
school to serve ona Parent 
Advisory Committee to dis- 
cuss the issues listed above, 
or other items that arise from 
our meetings. If interested, 
please call the office at 
459-4405. Students are invit- 
ed to sign up at the school 
office for a Student Advisory 
Committee. 


(1976 


grants 


shock 


teachers 


Alberta Teachers’ Asso- 
ciation President Pat English 
has termed the provincial 
government's announcement 
on grants to school boards 
under the School Grant's 
regulations for 1976, ‘‘tra- 
gic.” 

‘The announcement re- 
flects a complete failure to 
understand the purpose of 
the funding or the need for 
programs which school 
boards have been encoura- 
ged to offer as a result of the 
grants,’’ she said in Ed- 
monton after receiving word 
of the government decision. 

Involved are grants for 
special education teaching 
positions, for resource rooms 
for the mildly handicapped, 
for the Learning Disabilities 
Fund, for the declining 
enrolment and small school 
assistance programs, for 
Early Childhood Services, for 
extension programs, and for 
payment of Unemployment 
Insurance and Canada Pen- 
sion Plan premiums. 


EDUCATION WEEK 
ACTIVITIES 


Many interesting and ex- 
citing activities took place at 
Mackenzie during education 
week, March 1 - 7. For one 
student in particular Lyle 
Arnason, it was a most 
memorable time. Lyle won 
the Provincial education we- 
ek essay contest. His topic, 
My World Tomorrow was 
judged to be the best in the 
Northern Zone. Lyle, along 
with his teacher, John Os- 
good, were treated to a hectic 
round of activities on March 
4 and S. Activities included: 
An overnight stay at the 
Chateau Lacombe, sightsee- 
ing trips to AGT Towers and 
the Provincial Museum and 
Archives, then installation as 
Minister of Education by 
Julian Koziak. To culminate 


the day, the winners then 
met both the Premier, Mr. 
Lougheed and the Lieuten- 


ant-Governor Mr. Stein- 
hauer. 
On Tuesday evening, 


March 2nd Sir Alexander 
Mackenzie School held finals 
in the speech contest for 
students in Grades 1-6. 
Three class winners from 
each grade competed with 
one winner chosen at each 
grade level. 

The winners and topics 
were: 

Gr. 1 - Laurel Wheatley - 
Mr. Great Grandmother; Gr. 
2 - Doug Merchant, At My 
Cottage; Gr. 3 - Trevor 
Ferguson, Dinosaurs; Gr. 4 - 
Laura Teasdale, Orthodontic 
Work; Gr. 5 - Helen Smith, 
Kindness Club; Gr. 6 - Anne 
Geekie, Friends. 

The two hour program also 


P.K. plans 


Development 


Day 


March 19 is professional 
development day for the 
teaching staff at Paul Kane 
and a long weekend for stu- 
dents, 

Friday, March 19 is a 
holiday for Paul Kane’s 
students, but not for the 
teachers. Here are some 
exaniples of what the various 
depurtments will be doing on 
March 19. The social studies 
department will visit tempo 
pris ate school in the morning 
with a view toward com- 
paring curriculum, motiva- 
tion, philosophy and dis- 
cipline of that school with 
that of Paul Kane. In the 
afternoon, the teachers of 
this department will have a 
departmental meeting in 
which the topics for dis- 
cussion will include: accre- 
ditation, social science mod- 
ules and social work room 
expansion. 

Business education teach- 
ers will focus on increasing 
che meaningfullness of the 
program currently being off- 
ered in that department. The 
activities planned by this 
department are geared to- 
wards the achievement of the 
following goal: ‘Basically we 
want our end product, i.e. 
the graduating student, to be 
an employable, thinking per- 
son.’’ The business edu- 
cation department says, ‘‘th- 
is requires considerable co- 
ordination among courses 
and teachers, and struc- 
turing of the program such 
that each course becomes 
part of a meaningful whole 
rather than an end in itself.”’ 

Mathematics teachers will 


PHONE: 452-9290 


DINING ROOM 
AND LOUNGE 


CATS CRADLE 


TAVERN 
THE PLAYBOYS 
CABARET 


THURS., FRI. & SAT. 
WAREHOUSE 


engage themselves in the 
preparation of a mathematics 
teacher handbook. This doc- 
ument would include besides 
other information, suggested 
sequencing of topics and 
sources of enrichment. 

The English department 
has invited Agnes Buckles, 
head of Englich Department 
at McNally High to speak on 
alternative approaches in the 
classroom. The purpose is to 
help teachers individualize 
the English program. In the 
afternoon a group workshop 
is planned ~on the afore- 
mentioned topic. 


included musical numbers 
presented by students in 
Grade 6, The judges Mr. Ted 
Rogers, Miss Wilma Muir 
and Mr. Norris McLean of 
CFRN commented on the 
outstanding quality of the 
speeches and the difficulty of 
picking a winner. The even- 
ing was such a tremendous 
success that it will likely 
become an annual event at 
Mackenzie during education 
week. 

On Thursday afternoon, 
March 4, the students at 
Mackenzie were treated to 
many varied programs thr- 
oughout the afternoon. Gr- 
ade one students participa- 
ted in an option program that 
was conducted by parent 
volunteers. Each child had 
an opportunity to select two 
sessions of their choice from 
th * following: cooking, mus- 
ic, art, gymnastics, drama, 
puppetry or macrame. 

Grade 2 students also had 


two options in which direct 
participation was required. 
They were: creative reading, 
cooking, metric measure- 
ment and art projects. 

Grade 3 picked the theme 
‘Fitness and Nutrition’’. 
Each student attended a 
session on Nutritional Sn- 
acking presented by a home 
economist, followed by par- 
ticipation in such activities as 
cross-country skiing, tobog- 
anning, skating and snow- 
shoeing. 

‘*Around the World in Half 
a Day.”’ This theme involved 
students in grades 4 to 6 for 
the afternoon. Several par- 
ents volunteered to take 
students ona ‘‘Trip’’ with 
them to various countries 
throughout the world. Many 
volunteers showed slides, 
artifacts, clothing and food 
from these countries. Stu- 
dents had a choice of two 
countries to visit from the 
wide varieties being offered. 


WINNERS! 


L.B.H. HOME IMPROVEMENT CENTRE LTD. 
GRAND OPENING DOOR PRIZES 


Mrs. Armanda Savoie - #3 Madison 
N. Peters - #16 Farmstead Ave. 

B. Sargent - #1 Seymore Cres. 

J. A. Groves - #4 Gilmore Cres. 
Patrick Stewart - #41 Greenbrier Cres. 
Mr. A. Schute - #11 Gillian Cres. 
Lewis Cardin - #40 Fair Oaks Drive 
Mr. R. Coxen - 15108 - 114A St., Edmonton 
Mike Dronyk - #62 Sheridan Dr. 

Jim Ferris - #22 Labelle Cres. 

D. Christensen - #30 St. Vital Ave. 
Dale Stokke - #21 Beaverbrooke 


George Bulger - Morinville 


Marjorie Stack - #71 Greenfield Estates 
Mrs. Peter Kliparchuk - #9 Brentwood PI. 


The management of L.B.H. would like to thank the 
residents of St. Albert and district for helping to.make 
their Grand Opening Expansion Sale a success. 


HOME RENOVATIONS 


LOANS 
NOW AVAILABLE! 


Spring al last! Time to start thinking about remodelling,-adding to and fixing up the 
house. Rumpus room needs paint, spare room should be turned into a den and the long 
needed back entrance has to be built. 


Whatever your needs for spring renovations, we can help with the financial end of 
things. Home renovations loans are now available at competitive rates - with repayment 
terms tailored to suit your budget. Talk it over with us soon - summer’s just around the 


corner! 


BELMONT CREDIT UNION .,,. 


Our Key is People 


133 STURGEON SHOPPING PLAZA 


ST. ALBERT, ALBERTA. 


PHONE: 458-1133 


Sir Alexander MacKenzie Report 


On Thursday evening kin- 
dergarten students and their 
parents had an ‘‘Activity 
Night.’’ Activities in the 
gymnasium and on the 
skating rink were planned for 
parents and their children. 
This family night was enjoy- 


ed by both parents and 
students. 

The staff and students at 
Sir Alexander Mackenzie 
school enjoyed the many 
activities during education 
week and are enthusiastically 
looking forward to next year. 


FOR SALE ST. ALBERT 


Each week new listings are taken on homes for sale in 
St. Albert. For information on all houses for sale in St. 
Albert call -- 


LARRY de ST. CROIX -- 458-1640 
RESIDENT SALES CONSULTANT 
KENLO REAL ESTATE LTD.., -- 465-9454 


PUBLIC UTILITIES BOARD 
FOR THE PROVINCE OF ALBERTA 


IN THE MATTER OF ‘‘The Gas Utilities Act,’’ being 
Chapter 158 of the Revised Statutes of Alberta, 1970: 


AND IN THE MATTER OF ‘‘The Public Utilities 
Board Act,’’ being Chapter 302 of the Revised 
Statutes of Alberta, 1970: 


AND IN THE MATTER OF Plains-Western Gas and 
Electric Co. Ltd., a gas utility. 


NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING 


APPLICATION having been filed with the Public 
Utilities Board by Plains-Western Gas and Electric Co. 
Lid. (hereinafter called ‘‘the Applicant’’) for the 
approval of the Board of certain revisions and 
amendments to the prevailing rates or charges for gas 
supplied and services rendered by the Applicant to its 
customers, and more specifically, for an Order or 
Orders of the Board fixing arid approving: 

1. arevised schedule of rates, calculated by reducing 
the prevailing rates by removing therefrom a provision 
for recovery of a determined revenue deficiency over 
the sales period September 1, 1975 to March 31, 1976 
and after removing from the prevailing rates the charge 
applicable to property taxes payable by the Applicant 
on its operating facilities in the various urban 
municipalities of service; 

2. an addition to the revised schedule of rates in Item 
1. above to the extent required to provide for a change, 
effective April 1, 1976, in the Provincial Government 
support price under The Natural Gas Rebates Act; 

3. a percentage rider as an addition to the revised 
rates in Item 1. above to provide for the recovery of 
property taxes payable by the Applicant, in accordance 
with assessment by urban municipalities or under any 
other agreement, 

4. a revision of the present late payment charge of 
three cents (3¢) per Mcf to a charge of five percent (S%) 
calculated on the revenue billing of the particular 
month for which payment may be made after the due 
date; 

5. a proposal whereby the Applicant will refund all 
customer deposits presently held, requiring in lieu 
thereof a deposit or payment assurance from those 
customers, only, deemed not to have provided 
adequate assurance of payment for gas or services 
provided; 

6. such interim rates in the operating divisions of the 
Applicant, pending the fixing of final rates as the Board 
may determine. 

NOW, THEREFORE, TAKE NOTICE that the Board 
will hear any person having an interest in the matters 
which are the subject of the Application at the Court 
House, in the City of Calgary, in the Province of 
Alberta, on Thursday, the 18th day of March, 1976 at 
2:00 o'clock in the afternoon. , 

AND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE that unless 
objection by a person having a bona fide interest in the 
matters which are the subject of the Application is 
received by the Public Utilities Board during the course 
of the hearing above mentioned, or prior to the hearing, 
at the Board's Edmonton Offices: 


Eleventh Floor, Manulife Building, 
10055 - 106th Street, 
Edmonton, Alberta. 


the Board may approve the application, in whole or in 
part, without further notice. 

AND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE that in the event 
that objections are received in respect to one or some of 
the matters which are the subject of the Application, 
the Board may set over such matter or matters for 
further public hearing. 

DATED AT THE CITY OF EDMONTON, in the 
Province of Alberta this 5th day of March, 1976. 


PUBLIC UTILITIES BOARD 
C. R. LEISHMAN 
SECRETARY. 


ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1976 - 11 


ee Eye 


By Jeananne Kathol 
BASKETBALL 


Though they had a good 
season and played well, 
SAHS boys’ basketball fini- 
shed on Feb. 20 in con- 
ference playoffs against Sto- 
ny Plain. Members of the 


team were Don McDougall, 
Frank Tworek, Dan: Kehoe, 
Kevin King, Marty Scheibel- 
hofer, Randy Gusikoski, Mi- 
ke Worthman, Joe Tworek, 
Dean Roy (assistant captain) 
and John Kennedy (captain). 
Their coaches were Mr. Dan 
Chugg and Ross Gilmore. 
On Friday afternoon, Feb. 


BRAND NEW - IMMEDIATE POSSESSION 
Bungalow 1518 sq. ft. Dble. front drive garage. $80,900 
with $45,000 mig. at 102%. Very spacious entrance. 
Fireplace in L/R. One - 4 pce. and one - 3 pce. baths. 
His and hers sinks. No fences to build. Patio doors off 
kitchen. Washer and dryer utilities on main floor. 
Basement roughed in for family rm. with fireplace. 
TOM MILTON 459-6686, 459-6345. 


NEW LISTING 
1262 sq. ft. 3 bedrm. Bungalow. 6 mths. old. 1% baths. 
Ready for basement development. $39,000 mtg. at 
102%. Immaculate condition. RON KAYE 459-6686, 


458-0397. 


Se ee ee? 


DOORS OPEN - 8:30 P.M. 


ST. ALBERT INN 


THURSDAY NIGHT 
CABARET 


Sth a Pep Rally was held for 
the girls’ basketball team 
who made it to Provincials. 
President Lori Bezenar in- 
troduced the team at a 
general assembly. Cheer- 
leaders Carolyn Ringuette 
(captain), Mary-Anne San- 
che (co-captain), Debbie 
Warren, Maureen Savoie, 
Colleen Collins, Adrienne 
O'Kell, Theresa Rajotte, 
June Borle, and Susan Bailey 
led a few cheers to show the 
team, on behalf of all the 
students, their encourage- 
ment and school spirit. 
Thanks are due to our super 
cheerleading squad who did 
an excellent job all season 
long. 

On Friday evening (Feb. 5) 
at 5 p.m. our girls played 
their first game against 
Lethbridge, but lost 42-32. 
This made them eligible for 
the consolation prize. The 
next morning at 9 a.m. our 
Skyhawks won over Peace 
River in an easy game of 
63-17. At the consolation 
finals at 4 p.m. on Saturday, 
the girls lost to Camrose by 
42-37. Allin all, the girls’ 
icam made an excellent 
showing. Congratulations! 

The team this year was 
Sarah Van Tighem (Captain), 
Bernice McGillis (ass'l. cap- 
iain), Lorraine Gravelle, Ci- 
ndy Reinbold, Joan Powers, 
Donna Perrott, Denise You- 
ng. Diane Bokenfohr, Diane 
Brochu, Louise Gadoury, 
Barb Kathol and Joanne 
Bolion. They were coached 
by Mr. Hank Reinbold and 
Mr. Paul Chalifoux, and their 
capable manager was Tam- 
my Osborne. 


MORNING AFTER 


THURSDAY, MARCH 11; FRIDAY, MARCH 12 AND SATURDAY, MARCH 13 


FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 


St. Albert High Soundings 


EDUCATION WEEK 
ACTIVITIES 


On Monday night, Feb. 1 
Open House was held for 
parents to view a few of the 
many high school activities. 
Displays included were on 
science, the educational trip 
to Greece, and on business 
education. The TV arts class 
also gave a production on the 
Grade 10 social class Sask- 
atchewan trip last spring. 
Lunch was served by the 
home economics class. Open 
house was not heavily atten- 
ded, unfortunately, possibly 
due to the cold spell. 

On Tuesday, Feb. 2, there 
was a Gold Rush night for 
students, teachers, their 
families and friends. The 
response was excellent at 
this social evening. Each 
class sponsored a Klondike- 
type outlet such as an ice 
cream parlour, old fashioned 
restaurant, casino, saloon, 
and candy shop. The prize 
for best decorated class (two 
beautiful cakes) went to the 
“Kiuy's Corner’ restaurant 
(social classes and to the 
Silver Slipper’’ saloon (sc- 
ience class). Almost every- 
one there dressed Klondike. 
The best dressed girl was 
Terry Ogonoski and the best 
dressed guy was Pat Keyes. 
They each won a Red Onion 
Pizza. Congratulations! A 
profit of $415 was netted at 
Gold Rush night, and these 
proceeds go to Share Lent for 
Third World nations. 

On Tuesday, Feb. 2 and 
Thursday, Feb. 4, Grade 
Nine students from Sturgeon 
Heights and V. J. Maloney 
Junior Highs were given 
‘ours through our school as 
part of an orientation pro- 
gram. 

Wednesday morning, Feb. 
3. an Ash Wednesday Mass 
was celebrated at the R.C. 
Church. Pitch sang and the 
Spiritual Commitice organ- 
ized the readings. $95 was 
collected for the Share Lent 
project. 


Al Oeming of the Alberta 
Game Farm was scheduled to 
give a presentation on 
Friday, Feb. 5, but was 
unable to come. He will be 
coming at a later date. 


CURLING 


Congratulations go to Mr. 
and Mrs. Kupsch, both 
teachers at our school, who 
went to the Provincial Mixed 
Curling finals at Peace River 
last week. Their team lost to 
the Wylie Rink of Calgary, 
who eventually won the 
championship. Mr. Kupsch 


GOLD RUSH DAYS 


organizes the Square Draw 
curling league in our school. 


STUDENT UNION NEWS 


Students’ Union would like 
to thank publicly Mr. Blay- 
lock, who supplied them with 
a horse team and platform 
for the town carnival parade 
held in February. 

Elections are coming up 
soon, on March 23, so start 
thinking of nominees for the 
next Student Union office! 
There will be an elections 
dance with ‘‘Lash Larue’ on 
March 23. 


Dean Roy, Denise Young, Kevin Pieterczak 


Lorne Akins 


Science 


Lorne Akins Junior High 
will be holding their annual 


NOTICE TO 
CALGARY POWER LTD. 


CUSTOMERS 


EFFECTIVE MARCH 7, 1976 ST. ALBERT OFFICE 
TELEPHONE NUMBER HAS CHANGED TO 
458-0102. PLEASE CORRECT YOUR ST. ALBERT 
DIRECTORY. OUR ADDRESS WILL REMAIN - 192 
ST. ALBERT ROAD UNTIL LATER THIS SUMMER. 


seer GLASS & MIRROR 


8 RIEL DRIVE 


SPECIALISTS IN: 


*MIRROR *GLASS *BATHTUB & SHOWER ENCLOSURES 
*TABLETOPS *MIRRORED CLOSET DOORS 


*AUTO *PICTURE WINDOWS *REPAIRS *SCREENS 


WINDSHIELDS REPLACED 
459-4521 or 459-3735 


ALL INSTALLATIONS DONE BY QUALIFIED JOURNEYMAN 


FRED A. BENDLE, MGR. 
458-2533 RES. 


Fair 


science fair this year on 
March 18 in the evening from 
7-9. Three judges will be 
coming from around St. 
Albert to judge those pro- 
jects which have been selec- 
ied for the Fair, Four prizes 
will also be given out accord- 
ing to the judges decisions. 
Parents and interested stu- 
denis are welcome. Also the 
science club members are 
scheduling a dinner to be 
held for the judges. 


LOCATED ON THE ST. ALBERT TRAIL, ST. ALBERT 
PHONE: 459-5551 


©0080 88888SSSOOSOO8SSHSOOOSEEO 
12-ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1976. 


8:30 - 5:30 MONDAY TO SATURDAY 


*RESIDENTIAL *COMMERCIAL *AUTO 


*INSURANCE 


S 
oa 
= 
FIRST 30 FREE BEFORE 9:00P.M. @ 
Be 
& 
s 


One of the special cir- 
cumstances which causes an 
alteration in a woman's 
regular diet is pregnancy. 
However, the change in diet 
should actually begin before 
conception. A woman should 
make sure her diet is nutri- 
tionally sound by following 
the ‘Guide to Good Eating’ 
which has been outlined in 
previous articles and is 
available from the Sturgeon 


Health Unit. The ‘Guide’ 
offers an excellent dietary 
basis for any situation and 
with the additions mentioned 
in this article an expectant 
mom should be all set 
nutritionally. 

It is difficult to specify the 
‘quantity’ of food needed in 
prenatal diets because there 
are many factors such as the 
age and number of preg- 
nancies of the mother, the 


NUTRITION TODAY 


nutritional state of the 
mother when she started her 
pregnancy and others. Per- 
haps the most important 
thing to remember regarding 
‘quantity’ is that excess 
calories leading to obesity 
should be avoided and 
emphasis should be placed 
on the *‘quality’’ of the diet 
during pregnancy. 

Some simple guidelines for 
nutrition during pregnancy 


Parsonally speaking 


Rev. B. L. Heath 
First Baptist Church 

The Lord God formed man 
of the dust of the ground and 
breathed into his nostrils the 
breath of life; and man 
became a living soul. The 
soul expresses man as apart 
from God, in other words 
man as an individual. 

This individuality may re- 
nounee its dependence and 
refuse its submission to God. 
This is the free will of man 
hai God gives each of us. 

This soul we have is very 
valuable in the sight of God, 


for Christ said, **For what is 
aman profited, if he shall 
gain the whole world, and 
lose his own soul? Or what 
shall a man give in exchange 
for his soul.’’ Jesus is saying 
hai if a man cornered the 
world market and owned 
everything and lost his soul 
he'd still be a failure. 
Somelimes our values seem 
so short-sighted. Sometimes 
a man will give all his time to 


a business and none to the 
family. or God, 

There is many a resiless 
soul looking everywhere for 


securtiy, love, and recogni- 


ion and never looking to the 
author and giver of all these 
hings. 

Jesus said, ‘Take my yoke 
upon you and learn of me for 
lam meek and lowly in heart, 
and ye shall find rest unto 
your souls. The Bible tells 
us, ‘‘Thou shalt love thy Lord 
thy God with all thy heart, 
and with all thy strength, and 
with all thy mind and thy 
neighbour as thyself. 

Chris! dealt with failures, 
he insane, crackpots, his 
enemies, the downtrodden, 
he downeast, the up-and- 
vues as well as the great 
minds, the students and the 


are: 

1. ‘‘THE GUIDE TO GO- 
OD EATING"’ should pro- 
vide a basis for food selection 
for expectant and nursing 
mothers. Foods which are 
good sources of iron should 
be included in daily menus. 

2. Anaverage weight gain 
of 25 Ibs. is recommended 
during pregnancy. Usually 3 
Ibs. are gained during the 
first three months and 1 Ib. 
per week during the remain- 
der of the pregnancy. 

3. The way in which an 
expectant mother gains 
weight is of greater im- 
portance than the total 
amount. A sudden sharp 
increase after the 20th week 


ENGAGEMENT 
ANNOUNCEMENT 


HUNT - KELLY 


Mr. and Mrs. Stan Hunt 
are pleased to announce the 


engagement of their eldest 
daughter Terry Louise to 
Michael Sean, eldest son of 
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence 
Kelly, all of St. Albert. The 
wedding will take place 
April 24, 1976 at All Saints 
Anglican Cathedral, Ed- 


should be reported to her 
doctor. 

4. Pregnancy is not the 
time to institute weight 
reduction programs as se- 
vere caloric restriction can be 
harmful to the developing 
fetus. This applies particu- 
larly to the pregnant adol- 
escent since the nutritional 


TIRED OF 


demands of pregnancy are 
added to her already high 
nutrient needs. 

5S. Additional supplements 
such as vitamin and minerals 
should only be taken when 
prescribed by a physician. 

Next week Nutrition Today 
will discuss another special 
dietary circumstance. 


FIGHTING 


TRAFFIC MORNING 
& NIGHT? 


We can offer relief from this daily battle to an executive 
secretary who prefers to expend her energy on the 


typewriter rather than the car. 


This position entails working for two Vice-Presidents 
and requires a person of tact, capable of fitting into a 


close-knit office, who possesses above average typing 


and shorthand (or speedwriting) capabilities. 


LOCATION: BONAVENTURE INDUSTRIAL PARK 
ONE BLOCK WEST OF ST. ALBERT TRAIL 


INTERESTED? Please contact DUNCAN ROBERTSON 
A. V. CARLSON CONSTRUCTION LTD. 
14040 - 128 AVENUE, EDMONTON. 


PHONE: 452-7720. 


Gazette 


Classifieds 
458-2240 


Recreation, activities 
&further ‘Education, 
courses 


“BEAUTIFUL BRITISH COLUMBIA” 
TRAVEL INFORMATION SEMINAR 


Wondering where to spend your summer holidays? 
Looking for help on locations for fishing, hunting, 
boating and other recreational activities? 


The Canada West Tourist Association will be 
presenting an evening of films for your enjoyment and 
information on areas to visit in British Columbia. The 
first film, ‘‘Invitation to Adventure’’ covers the exciting 
activities in the Cariboo-Chilcotin Region. Film number 
two follows the Yellowhead Highway through B.C. 
‘Vacation 8’ the third film explores houseboating, 
fishing and the various guest ranches available. 


Resource people will be available at the seminar to 
discuss any area of recreation activities that you might 
wish to participate in during your vacation. 


BRING THE FAMILY to Sir George Simpson School, 
Assembly Area - Sunday, March 14th at 7:30 p.m. 


ADMISSION -- FREE 


TO REGISTER 
PHONE PARKS & RECREATION AT 459-6601 


THIS IS WHERE 


ITS AT! 


monton, 
Sincere in heart. 


Put a roof over your head . 
with help from a team of professionals 


3 B/rm bungalow - developed basement, backing 
on to a park - $65,900. 

3 B/rm bi-level - fenced and landscaped well 
maintained $65,800. 

3 B/rm bungalow - developed basement garage 
lots of extras $68,800. 

3 B/rm bi-level - built ins - good location June Ist 
possession - $65,900. 

3 B/rm executive bungalow - double attached front 
drive garage. Sunken family room with f/pl. 3 pce. 
ensuite. A real beauty. Open to offers. 


For further information on any of the above 
Call -- GEOFF BROWN -- 458-1003 


LISTED AT ONLY $65,800. 
1250 sq. ft. bi-level with 1% baths, 6 room, 3 
bedrooms, roughed in fireplace and RIDP. Located in 
Millburn Crescent. Call SIMON VENNER 454-6273. 


JUST LISTED IN AKINSDALE 
Situated on a large fenced corner lot. This 1% year old 
home features 3 bedrooms, living room, dining room 
and large kitchen. In addition there is one 4 pce. bath 
and '2 bath off M/br. This 1262 sq. fi. home carries a 
large $37,000 mige. at 10%. Total price $66,700. Call 
DON SIMPSON 459-5277. 


TREED GRANDIN 
The best crescent in St. Albert. Close to schools. and 
swimming pool. Lovely 1216 sq. ft. 3 bedroom 
bungalow with fireplace and developed basement. 
Fantastic treed 92° wide lot. RON MORRITT 459-8211. 


LOTS OF HOUSE FOR LITTLE MONEY 
3 year old bi-level located in Lacombe Park. Open 
fireplace in living room bath and half. Fenced and 
landscaped. Priced for quick sale at $62,500. Hurry and 
call ANNE GAMBORSKI 459-8067. 


EXCLUSIVE LISTING FOREST LAWN 
Lovely 3 year old bungalow over 1300 sq. ft. Tyndal 
rock fireplace. Extra flue for fireplace in basement. 
Large kitchen with many cupboards, 1% baths. RIDP in 
basement. Many more extra features. Buy now, take 
possession June or July or earlier. Asking only $71,500. 
To view please phone ANNE GAMBORSKI 459-8067. 


THIS 1187 SQ. FT. 
Bi-level is in immaculate condition and has a quiet 
crescent location, close to schools. Has 3 bedrooms up, 
bath and a half, unspoiled basement with triple 
plumbing roughed in and large $36,000. mortgage. Call 
ARLAN JOHNSON 458-2352. 


', DUPLEX. 
Landscaped yard in Sturgeon Subd. 10 years old. 1008 
sq. fi. bungalow, Full and open basement for your 


design ideal. 3 bedrooms. May or June possession. 
DON HAUCK 459.4312. 


3'2 MILES OFF HWY. DAPP 
Ideal mixed farm, 3 quarters overlooking large lake that 
is siocked cach year. Excellent fishing and hunting in 
he area. 18 miles north of Westlock. 225 acres pasture. 
200 acres cultivated. Price $155,000. BOB HAUCK ° 
954-3829, 


PEEK AT WHAT'S NEW 
Priced to sell at $61,900. includes 1092 SO)ttucd 
bedrooms, 1'2 baths. Immaculate home situated on a 


quic: crescent, For more information call MEL KNOTT 
459-5377, 


FOR COURTEOUS AND OUTSTANDING SERVICE 
FEEL FREE TO CALL ONE OF OUR PROFESSIONAL 
REAL ESTATE CONSULTANTS TODAY! 


PAT CONNOR, MANAGER 
GEOFF BROWN 


459-7965 
459-8211 


459-8141 


954-3829 


ae 
LENA 


vce? 


Coast to Coast 
Real Estate Service 


Reg’é. tm. AE. LePage Limited 


ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1976 - 13 


Cheese Spread 


Ingersol 
Regular. Past. Process. 
2 Ib. jar 


$9 


Choose Safeway Brands! 


Skim Milk Powder 


Lucerne 
Canada First Grade Pasteurized. Keep Some on Hand!...... 


pple Sauce 


Ap ouse 
Canada Fancy. Serve as is or use in baking! ..398 ml. tin 


5. *2" 
33°] 


Cheese Slices $433 


Lucerne Canadian 


Maple Leaf Biscuits Pd 


eae 
Snack Crackers | 4.Q° 
T-Mix Biscuits 98° 


Bick's Pickles $419 
Yum Yum Pickles 


| $419 


Baby Dil Pickles" 


Fig Bars 


avid Biscuits 


Kipper Snacks 


Salt 


lodized. Table 


Pepper 


$48 
3,sym0 | 
seas ad 


fans seis in ee 


For Daily 
Use! 


For Everyday 
use! ¢ 
907 g. pkg. 


Evaporated Milk 


Coffee, Tea or For Baking! 


Orange 


Minute Maid. F 


8 oz. tin 


15 fl. oz. tin 


juice 


ntrate. Start The Day With a Glass! 


. vantities 
CANADA SAFEWAY LIMITED only, : 
© COPYRIGHT 1960. SAFEWAY STORES INCORPORATED. 


259 


Tomatoes 


Town House 
Canada Choice. 540 mi. tin 
For Use in Casseroles 
or Soups! 


Mushroom 
Soup 


Campbell's. Condensed. 284 ml. tin 


4,89: 


Great Time To Stock Up! 


Tea Bags = 83° 
Margarine =, 5] 
Mixed Vegetables 


Bel-air. Frozen 
Camada Fancy. ...scccciecssssssescssscesesssecssesseeens 2 Ib. bag 


Instant Coffee had 


Serve 


with Sodas 


Maxwell House 


Chicken-a-la-King 99: 


15° 
Mashed { Potatoes ve 7 Be 
Chuckwagon Dimmer QR 


won 69! 


Pop 


Carnival. Cola, 28 fl, 0z. bottle 


Hamburger Helper 


Betty Crocker, Assorted Varieties. ; 


Tater Gems 
Mini Puddings 77° 
Angel Food Cake Wi Se ba 


potato Chips 84 
$95 


Pizz a Frozen. 
Flashlight 
Batteries 


Serve 
Chilled... 


a 
Refreshing Drink! 


29° 


Health and Beauty Aids | 


Toothpaste $198 Eveready 
Crest. Regular and Mint Flavor................. 2x100 mi. tube nd va yA 

F 
Secret Spray | $y 2:51" 


Transistor 
Batteries 


Roll- On Deodorant | $4 


Eveready 
C or D Cell 
Pkg. of 2 
Vapo Rub 98° 9 . $449 
Vicks that scratchy Coughl..........cccccccee 142 mi. btle. 4 


Noxzema 


Medicated Skin Cream 


Cough Syrup Mixture 


ee 
ae 


Vicks. For that scratchy cough! 


Pampers 


Overnight Disposable Diapers 


: $48 


ee 889 


A FRENCH CINDERELLA AT VINCENT MALONEY 


DUCATION 
EEK 
HIGHLIGHTS 


| aie ol fo hE. .O} 
DAVE DRYDEN TALKS HOCKEY AT LORNE AKINS ii a | wind i 
‘ y Weal isk Ls WG ~ * ¥ i 
Ley eae » 8 : 


mabtiaeinasectiiessasiaiii: 
— 


DISPLAY AT VITAL GRANDIN ST. ALBERT HIGH GOLD RUSH DAYS DISPLAY AT LEO NICKERSON 


i; ~— Mathematics Metrication Science 6% 
bss — Meanmrement ‘ v ie 


De 


THE PAUL KANE BAND METRIC DISPLAYS AT ROBERT RUNDLE 


ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1976 - 15 


oo 


Se 


Maple syrup - the first 
taste of Spring 


In many parts of eastern 
Canada, the first sign of 
spring is the trickling of sap 
from thousands of maple 
trees. 

Farmers from Ontario, 
Quebec, Nova Scotia and 
New Brunswick head for the 
sugar bush to reap their 
special harvest -- more than 
1,500,000 gallons of maple 
syrup. 

Usually following on their 
heels are thousands of 
sweettoothed visitors hoping 
to sample some of the 
delicious maple syrup and 
sugar products and buy more 
for use at home. 

Many farmers hold infor- 
mal public parties from mid- 
March to late April, the usual 
maple syrup season. Some 
sugar-bush owners serve 
visitors hearty dishes like 
fried ham, omelettes, bakes 
beans, mashed potatoes and 
pancakes, all dripping in 
syrup. 

Essential to most parties is 
‘la tire.’ To make it, some 
of the sap is boiled past the 
syrup stage, then poured hot 
onto a clean white bank of 
snow. The cooled taffy-treat 
is then wound around a stick 
or fork and eaten as a 
delicious gooey lollipop. 

Dozens of Canadian cen- 
res will stage maple syrup 
festivals or sugaring-off par- 
‘ies this spring. One of the 
largest is held annually at 
Elmira, Ontario, a small 


rural community 12 miles 
north of Kitchener. It usually 
attracts about 20,000 visitors 
from Canada and the United 
States. This year’s date is 
April 10. 

On Maple Syrup Day, the 
main street is blocked off 
while tlapjacks smothered in 
amber-colored maple syrup 
are served to the crowds. 
Nearby are wagons laden 
with farm produce, including 
cooked cheese, sauerkraut, 
beefwurst, schmeercase, su- 
mmer sausage and shoofly 
pie. 

Handmade quilts, hooked 
or braided rugs, cookbooks, 
place mats, aprons and home 
baking are also sold. Local 
artists display their work and 
an old fashioned soap-mak- 
ing kettle is kept boiling. 

Visitors are also invited to 
tour the surrounding sugar- 
bush in an open sleigh. A 
countryside tour stops at the 
blacksmith’s shop, general 
store, buggy shop and 
crosses a covered bridge. 

Other areas that welcome 
visitors are Crysler Farm 
Battlefield Park, seven miles 
east of Morrisburg, Ontario; 
Bruce's Mill Conservation 
Area, north of_Metropolitan 
Toronto; and Plessisville, in 
the Eastern Townships re- 
gion of Quebec. 

Dates depend on the wea- 
ther and usually can’t be set 
long in advance. Ideal 
weather calls for cold frosty 


369 cases of abuse 


During 1975, 369 cases of 
child abuse were reported to 
the province’s Child Abuse 
Registry, Social Services and 
Community Health Minister 
Helen Hunley announced 
this week. 

Miss Hunley said the 
figures compare closely with 


Young 
riders 
make 
history 


Four young Albertans ma- 
de history March 1 when 
hey left for Toronto to 
represent Alberta for the 
firs! time in the Annual 
Canadian National Youth 
Team (quarter horse) Tour- 


nament March 3 shop 3 
Exhibition Park. 
Their trip was made 


possible through the spon- 
sorship of the Junior Quarter 
Horse, the Senior Quarter 
Horse Associations of Al- 
beria and the general public. 

The four team members 
are: Burke Perry of Ed- 
monion, Leslie Trotter, High 
River; Teresa Roenisch, Bl- 
ack Diamond and_ Vicki 
Heintz of Calgary. 


1974 statistics when 373 
actual cases were reported. It 
is estimated that 400 cases 
occur every year in Alberta. 

Doctors, hospitals and 
other agencies figures prom- 
inently in reporting cases 
while in 1974 the community 
made the majority of reports, 
she said. 

The 1975 statistics, which 
did not include unfounded 
reports, showed the com- 
munity reported 40 cases 
while doctors and hospitals 
iogether reported 79. Other 
agencies made 40 reports. In 
29 cases il was a relative who 
reported the abuse, and in 28 
cases il was the mother who 
reported the battering of her 
child. 

Operated under the child 
welfare branch of the de- 
pariment of social services 
and community health, the 
Child Protection registry was 
established in 1974 to pro- 
vide a centralized record of 
cases of child neglect or 
battery. In 1973, before the 
registry was established, 
only 295 cases of suspected 
abuse came to light, 

Statistics show that most 
children involved suffered 
bruises, while other injuries 
ranged from burns to welts 
and fractures. 78 reports 
were altributed to excessive 
discipline. 

The majority of the cases 
occurred in Calgary and 
Edmonton; 132 cases came to 
light in Calgary, while 130 
came to the attention of child 
welfare workers in Ed- 
monion. 

Although the age of the 
children ranged from zero to 
17 years, more than SO per 
cent of the battered children 
were under the age of five. 

Beside actual abuse cases, 
4077 cases of neglect were 
reported. 


16-ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, 


nights followed by sunny 
days with the temperature 
climbing to 5-10 degrees 
Celsius (40 or 50 degrees F). 

This usually happens to- 
wards the end of March in 
Ontario and Quebec and a 
few weeks later in the 
Atlantic provinces. A good 
run may last six weeks. 

The production of syrup 
and candy from the boiled 
sap of the maple tree is 
exclusively a North American 
activity. Only two of the 10 
varieties of maples in Canada 
and Il3 inthe U.S. give sap 
sweet enough to make syrup 
-- the sugar maple and the 
black maple. The former is 
common in Canada. 

North American Indians 
discovered the sweet secret 
of the maples. Not only did 
they find the taste pleasing, 
they found it helped to ward 
off scurvy (the sap is rich in 
Vitamin C), 

Early explorers and sett- 
lers copied the gathering 
methods and harvested the 
maple sap, using the boiled 
product as an inexpensive 
cane sugar substitute. To- 
day, in some parts of eastern 
Canada, the production of 
maple products is a mulli- 
million dollar industry. 

About 85 pe® cent of 
production is concentrated in 
the province of Quebec. The 
Eastern Townships, between 
the St. Lawrence River and 
U.S. border is a particularly 
productive region. 

Large commercial bushes, 
of as many as 20,000 trees, 
have been modernized in 
recent years, to cut labour 
costs. A network of plastic 
\ubing carries the sap direc- 
ily to the sugar cabin where 
it is boiled to syrup bg oil or 
gas heat. 

Most people find the 
iraditional methods used by 
many farmers more interes- 
ling, It’s romantic to walk 
through the woods and taste 
the sap as it drips from the 
spile or spout into a bucket; 
io see the steamy breath of 
the horses pulling the gath- 
ering tank ona cart or sleigh; 
and to sniff the mingling 
aromas of burning wood and 
boiling sap in the old 
fashioned sugar shack. 


Indian 
portraits 


still on 
show 


Portraits of the Indians”’ 
continues to be exhibited at 
the Provincial Museum of 
Alberta up till April 25. 

The exhibition includes 
paintings by Paul Kane, 
Frederick Verner and Karl 
Bodmer, some of the artists 
who travelled the west 
between the 1830s and Con- 
federation. 

The majority of the works 
in this exhibition were pain- 
ied before the 1930s and 
many of them before the turn 
of the century. 

The romanticized view of 
the Indian as noble savage, 
which was widely held by the 
Europeans at the time, is 
evident in the works at the 
display. 


MARCH 10, 1976, 


ONLY THE rustle of pages and a cultured 
murmur in “Oxbridge” inflections break 
the silence at the Oxford and Cambridge 


Inflation a threat 


‘ 


© National Geographic Society 


club, one of about 40 London men’s clubs 
still surviving in the face of inflation and 
high taxes in Great Britain. 


to gentleman's club 


Washington -- When wo- 
men invaded London clubs a 
few years ago, appalled 
clubmen retreated deeper 
into their leather armchairs 
and grumbled into their 
vintage port. 

Some clubs coped with the 
invasion by allowing women 
io use their dining rooms at 
specified times or by setting 
up ‘‘ladies annexes." Others 
remained steadfastly male. 

Now the exclusive gentle- 
men's clubs are facing a 
more deadly onslaught: in- 
flaiion. The high cost of 
everything from busboys’ 
salaries to brass_ polish 
challenges club secretaries at 
Boodle's, Pratt's, Beefsteak, 
The Athenacum, and other 
bastions of tradition. 


GUARDS JOINS CAVALRY 


The Guards Club, founded 
in 1810, recently was forced 
io merge with the Cavalry 
Club, and auctioned off 
everything from chandeliers 
‘Oo linens, the National 
Geographic Society reports. 

Before World War 11, 
about 120 clubs clustered 
around Pall Mall and St. 
James's Street; now less 
‘han 40 survive. Some trace 
heir ancestry back to 18th- 
century coffechouses; others 
had racier origins. 

White's Club, founded in 
1693, was originally a choco- 
late house, but it attracted 
heavy-betting aristocratic 
gamblers who made it 
notorious, One member lost 
32,000 pounds at the card 
‘able during a memorable 
night back in 1755. 

Cards were not the only 
way to lose money. The 
betting book at White's 
reveals that *‘Mr. F. Caven- 
dish bets Mr. H. Brownrigg 
2-1 that he does not kill a 
blue bottle fly before he goes 


10 bed.”’ The archive fails to- 


disclose whether Brownrigg 
bagged his blue bottle. 

A pleasant stroll down St. 
James's’ Street from White's 
is Boodle’s Club. Though it 
was founded in 1763 bv a 
manservant named Boodle, 
the club became a meeting 
place for peers, and anyone 
asking for Sir John quickly 
found himself surrounded by 
responding members. 

An 18th-century duke en- 
joyed sitting in Boodle's 
elegant bow window on rainy 
days to watch ‘‘the damn'd 


people get wet.” 
DECENT COAT HELPS 


Some of the ‘*people’’ then 
had their own establish- 
ments. A club grandly called 
the House of Lords never- 
theless was frequented, a 
historian relates, by the 
“more dissolute sort of 
barristers, attorneys, and 
iradesmen of what were then 
called the better sort, but no 
one who wore a decent coat 
was excluded.” 

By the 19th century, 
London clubs no longer were 
aristocratic preserves. Newly 
rich industrialists built pre- 
‘entious townhouses for their 
clubs. Other groups that 
shared similar wealth, tas- 
cs, or rank organized ex- 
clusive meeting places. 

Ai the Carlton, tradi- 
cionally the only men put up 
for membership have been 
‘ruc-blue members of the 
Conservative Party, but the 
financial squeeze now is 
forcing the club to consider 
admitting non-Tories. It may 
not be easy. A Carlton 
member once brought a legal 
injunction against a chair- 
man who wanted to admit 
Liberal Party members. 

White's, another haunt of 
Tories, cherishes its repu- 
tation as London's most 
arrogant club. A Labour 
Party official who had the 
iemerity to enter White's 
was kicked soundly in the 
seat of the pants by a 
member. The kicker was 
forced to resign because 
“vou can't have that sort of 
thing.” 

The Athenacum, ranked as 
the club of the intelligentsia, 
shelicrs Anglican bishops. 
scientists, judges, men of 
Iciters, and the most dis- 
linguished people in govern- 
ment. 

The club's imposing mein- 
bership list inspired a bit of 
verse: ‘‘The very waiters 
answer ‘Yes’ with eloquence 
Socratical, And always place 
the knives and forks in order 
mathematical.” 

The food at London clubs 
often is noi equal to the 
service. One commentator 
mocked The Athenaeum: 
‘“Where all the arts and 
sciences are understood ex- 
cept gastronomy."’ Carlton's 
records disclose that in 1881 
Sir William Fraser ‘‘used 
threatening language to the 


steward about the aspara- 


gus. 
WAITER IN TEARS 


The staffs of London clubs 
must often maintain stiff 
upper lips in the face of 
abuse. At the Turf Club a 
guest thanked a waiter for 
his excellent service. The 
waiter broke into tears, 
explaining after he composed 
himself: ‘‘l -have been 
employed here man and boy 
for 40 years, sir, and that’s 
ihe first kindly word I have 
ever heard.” 

Wailers sometimes: must 
serve as volunteer firemen. 
At the Oriental, founded for 
colonial civil servants, one 
retired India hand fell asleep 
every night over his cigar 
and port. He held the club 
record for setting his chair 
afire--14 times in one year. 

Paying for fire damage 
aside, London men’s clubs 
are not expensive by Ameti- 
can country club. standards, 
Annual dues usually run 
about $240 a year. But not 
everyone with the requisite 
money is admitted. In many 
clubs, just one blackball 
vetoes a proposed member. 

One famous club took in no 
members for two years. The 
members were bewildered at 
the unwonted exclusiveness 
until it was discovered that 
one befuddled old gentleman 
always put his vote in the 
"No" slot because he th- 
ought it meant ‘No Objec- 
thon, 


A grass- 


roots 


approach 


A grass-roots approach is 
being taken to solving a 
waste water disposal pro- 
blem by an Agriculture 
Canada food technologist at 
the Summerland, B.C., Re- 
search Station. 

Waste water from canning 
factories in the fruit-pro- 
ducing Okanagan Valley is 
being released at the top of 
grass-covered slopes. Micro- 
organisms around the grass 
roots break down the organic 
matter. 


A special ribbon cutting ceremony is to be held in St. Albert on March 13, 1976 to inaugurate the recent purchase of 10 
new buses by the St. Albert Transit System. On hand for this special ceremony will be elected and civic dignitaries from 
the Provincial and Municipal Governments. 


Following the ribbon cutting ceremony at 10:30 a.m., the new buses will replace the Edmonton Transit System buses 
now being used. The 10 new St. Albert buses will be operated and maintained by the Edmonton Transit System under 
contract to the St. Albert Transit System. 


To commemorate this important occasion, the St. Albert Transit System will provide special service schedules and free 
bus passes valid only from 11:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. on Saturday, March 13, 1976. The bus passes can be obtained from 
participating St. Albert Merchants. The special service schedules are outlined below. 


RIBBON CUTTING CEREMONY oP Ene Bee: Sanya 
TIME: 11:00 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M. 


IME: 10:30 A.M. 
T DATE: SATURDAY* MARCH 13, 1976. 


DATE: SATURDAY, MARCH 13, 1976 
PLACE: PERRON STREET [in front of Arena] 


ST. ALBERT EAST buses will go from St. Anne/Perron to Edmonton and return the same way. See special schedule 
a below. 
“4 ST. ALBERT WEST buses will after 11:30 a.m., go to and from Edmonton at the St. Albert Bus Station [no transfer 
needed]. 
ST. ALBERT NORTH will have a special bus service every half hour to and from Westmount, change at the bus station 
for downtown Edmonton, 


SPECIAL SCHEDULE ST. ALBERT EAST 


102 Ave/102 St. 

Westmount I 

118 Ave/124 St. : ¢ i then 

St. Albert Bus Stn. A : : NF to 

S.W. Churchill/Fairview i es és 5. normal 
St. Anne/Perron A a 1. j ’ i schedule 
St. Albert Bus Stn. 

118 Ave/124 Street 

102 Ave/102 St. 


102 Ave/102 St. 

118 Ave!124 St. 

St. Albert Bus Stn. 

St. Anne/Perron 

S.W. Churchill/Fairview 
St. Albert Bus Stn. WESTMOUNT 
118 Ave!124 St. |see North 

102 Ave/102 St. .05 .05 schedule] 


CHANGE AT BUS 
STATION FOR 
SERVICE TO 
AND FROM 


SPECIAL SCHEDULE FOR ST. ALBERT NORTH 
Normal schedule until 11 A.M. then: 


Westmount é De oc 6.35 
St. Albert Bus Stn. ‘ Ss 5. ‘ 6.46 
Perron/St. Anne : 18 48 SViS 5.43 , to West 


Leddy Dawson _ oo NE Ses A 7.15 
7.21 


Youville ; 
Perron/St. Anne ‘ ‘ ‘ $.3 F . 7.24 
St. Albert Bus Stn. sg ; 5. 4 R 7.30 
Westmount > i : Sis F A to Gar. 


Then back to normal Saturday schedule. 
Change at the St. Albert Bus Station for to or from 102 Ave/102 Street 


SPECIAL SCHEDULE FOR ST. ALBERT WEST 


Normal schedule, except that buses will go to and from Edmonton at the St. Albert Bus 
Station after 11.34 a.m. using new buses. 


ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1976 - 17 


i a Re RE NR ARS 


So, 


St. Albert 


Town of 


on the purchase 


of ten new buses for St. Albert 


Sturgeon Electrical Supplies Ltd. 


St. Albert Inn 

Puppy Palace 

Grandin Shell Service 
One Hour Martinizing 
Tercier’s Marineland Ltd. 
Club Mocombo 

David Datsun Ltd. 
Roger's Esso Service 
Dragon Palace 

Red Rooster Sturgeon Plaza 
Buxton Real Estate 
Sweetheart Jewellery 
St. Albert Bakery Ltd. 


Forrest Insurance Services 


459-5535 
459-5551 
459-3826 
459-7558 
458-0260 
458-2411 
459-6022 
458-2211 
458-0256 
458-0505 
459-8712 
459-4461 
459-7550 
459-6257 
458-1122 


18 -ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1976. 


Robinson's 


Pet and Hobby Supplies Ltd. 
Stretch Couture Fabrics Ltd. 
Canada Sateway Ltd. 
Armstrongs Men's Wear 
Grandin Bakery 
MACLEOD'S 

Silver Lantern Restaurant 


Hutchings Family Shoes 


St. Albert Glass and Mirror Ltd. 


Sturgeon Glass Ltd. 
Bank of Montreal 
Toronto Dominion Bank 
Chris's Grocery 


St. Albert Sportshop Ltd. 


459-7574 
459-4934 


459-7074 
459-6560 
459-5571 
458-1790 
459-8383 
459-4521 
459-7751 
459-7701 
459-5566 
459-7880 
458-0000 


An OXFAM-Canada West 
report received this week 
said that the most recent 
activities of veteran OXFAM 
relief workers in earthquake 
devastated Guatemala have 


Oxfam update on Guatemala relief 


been in the housing of 30,000 
people in temporary frame 
shelters covered with plastic 
sheeting, in the distribution 
of tons of blankets, in 
maintaining a safe water 


Cree instructor at 
artifacts exhibition 


Anne Anderson, instructor 
of Cree at Grant MacEwen 
College, will be presenting a 
large display of Indian crafts 
and artifacts in the Ron 
Harvey School lunchroom 
March 30 at 8 p.m. 

The display is being spon- 
sored by the cultural com- 
mittee and arranged by ils 
vice-chairman Kay Mayling. 

Mrs. Anderson will also 
bring with her medicinal 
herbs and will come dressed 
in her own colourful Indian 


dress. She will end the 
evening with an educational 
ialk on Indian history and 
folk-lore, adding the final 
touch of tribal music and 
dance. 

The aim of the exhibit is to 
show the part the Indians 
played in St. Albert's his- 
1ory. 

Mrs. Mayling hopes to 
form a committee interested 
in fostering the Indian 


culture and helping St. 
Albert Indians to preserve 
their own culture. 


Anne Anderson 


Sugar beets and rapeseed 


A plant pathologist at the 
Agriculture Canada Leth- 
bridge, Alta., Research Sta- 
tion thinks it unwise to grow 
rapeseed in rotation with, or 
even near, sugar beets. 

The reason? The sugar 
beet nematode feeds on both 
crops and the pest has 


infested all beet-growing 
districts of Alberta. 


Congratulations 


Town of 


St. Albert 


on the purchase 


of 


ten new buses 


for St. Albert 


St. Albert 
Chamber of Commerce 


supply and in helping to 
reorganize local food co-op- 
eratives to meet emergency 
food needs. 

The field team has been 
concentrating its efforts in 
the most seriously affected 


If you would like to serve 
with an Indian Cultural 
Committee call Mrs. Mayling 
ai 458-0906. 


thing for nothing. Right? 


does. If you've never heard 
of a wavel agent before, 
have never used one, or ever 
plan to do any traveling-busi- 
nessor deenite'=then thistle 
meant for you, 

Just three minutesofread- 
ing now could save you a lot of 
time and money later. And 
we're all interested in money, 
aren't we? 


What you get for nothing. 

The travel agent is a cen- 
tral source for all travel in- 
formation and reservations. 
Really a one-stop travel center 
and guidance counselor, 

He can inake reservations 
with airlines, cruise ship lines, 
bus lines, most hotels, car rent- 
ly andl even sightseeing trips. 

He can arrange visas, in- 
surance, travelers checks, and 
tickets to the Plaza Del Toros, 
The Met, The Mets, Nets or 
Jets. He can arrange group 
tours for archeologists, at 
chemists and architects, inde- 
pendent tours for those who 
ike to go it alone, foreign 
and domestic excursions and 
straight business trips, 

He can also ta you what 
to wear, what to see, what and 
what not to eat = and whether 
you should drink the water. 

Say you're flying to New 
York, You could getaticketand 
recommendations on all of the 
above for the same price you 
pay for the ticket alone. ‘That's 
the difference a travel agent 
can make, 

All for nothing? All for 
nothing. 


What you get for something. 
You ”~ have to pay for 
exceptions like an unusual 
itinerary, extended or inde- 
pendent arrangements, late 
cables, or last minute changes 
such as deciding to go to 
Paris instead of Pocatello 
But there are no hidden 
charges. You'll know about any 
charges before you're charged 
If you are ever charged 


7 
| I ain ray 


Nobody gives. you some- 


Wrong. The travel agent 


rural areas around San 
Martin, Teopan, Antigua and 
Guatemala City. 

Simultaneously Oxfam- 
Canada West volunteers and 
staff have been working ur- 
gently to organize all poss- 
ible hunger meals and 
benefit concerts to raise 
support funds across the 
west. 

And in Edmonton, Nancy 
Gibson, the West's projects 
co-ordinator arranged the 
provision of a 707 aircraft by 
Pacific Western Airlines and 
$36,000 from the Alberta 
Government to cover the cost 


Buses cost money. 
Services cost money. 


g 59EZ 10Ob she 


Who pays? 

‘Travel agents are paid a 
commission by the air,land or 
sea carners they book you with, 
by most hotels, car rental com- 
panies and sightseeing tour 
operators, 


Why? Economics. Conve 
nience, There are more than 
9,000 travelagencies inthe U.S, 
Most airlines, for example, 
couldn't afford to have 9,000 
convenient sales offices around 
the country. This way, the air- 
lines pay the travel agent when 
he delivers passengers, and 
dont pay him when he doesn't. 
Fair enough. . 

So it naturally figures that 
the travel agent is gomg to try 
to sell you the most expensive 
travel package he can, night? 

Wrong. The travelagentis 
out to make you happy, not the 
airline or cruise ship. 

Because he wants you back. 
So be honest with your travel 
agent. Hecantarrangeachan- 
pagne vacation on a beer bud- 
get. But he can get vou a lot 
more for your buck than you 
yourself can arrange. Because 
that’s his business. 

And the travel agent is not 
a mind reader. If you say you 
wantasecluded two weeks away 
from it all in Tahiti, and youre 
bored after a day and would 
rather have the two weeks in 
Vegas, dont blame him. 


Whoshould usea travel 

Business travelers. Vaca- 
tion travelers. Kids being sent 
tograndmothers. Grandmoth- 
ers. Anyone who travels. 

A travel agent is the sim- 
plest, most efficent way to get 
where you want to go, stay at 
the right places, pay the right 
pric oredan the most for your 
money. And not be furious with 
the relative who gave you a 
bum steer. 


Why it's better to with 
atravel zoel 
your Uncle Harold. 
Unless your Uncle Har- 
old isa travel agent. 
Chances are, your travel 


Congratulations 


on the purchase of ten new buses for St. Albert 


em IER yy, 


of a February 15th flight to 
Guatemala of 50,000 blank- 
ets--donated by the Canadian 
Armed Forces, and 5,600 
pounds of medical supplies- 
donated by Canadian com- 
panies through Canadian 
University Service Overseas. 

Throughout all this the 
Guatemala field team also 
has been working to esta- 
blish practical priorities for 
reconstruction. They have 
now identified one such: the 
provision of corrugated iron 
roofing sheets for the cons- 
truction of solid shelters. The 
rainy season is approaching 


The price you have to 
for a good travel 


agent has been where you want 
togo. Maybe vour uncle has too. 
But the travel agent has 
the latest facts. He can tell vou 
that the new Paris Plaza is now 
under new management and is 
nothing like the Pari: Plaza 
Uncle Harold staved in a 
month ago. Because it’s his 
business to know, 


/ Ihe doesn't know from 
firsthand experience, he 
knows the right people to ask. 
So he's been around, 

And how do Uncle Har- 
old's qualifications stack up? 


Before a travel agency 
manager Gin hang his shingle 
on the door, or write tickets, he 
must have received an appoint- 
ment fromthe Air Traffic Con- 
ference( ATC) or International 
Air Transport: Association 
(IATA), the International Pas- 
senger Ship Associaton, and 
others., his appointment re- 
quires at least two years of full- 
time experience in creating, 
generating and promoting pas- 
senger transportation sales and 
services and at least one vear's 
experience in airline ticketing 
and reservations. 


About financial responsi- 
bility? Glad vou asked. A travel 
agent is bonded for at least 
$10,000. That's a lot of travel 
insurance. He must pay his bill 
to the airline in full every ten 
days-or his appointment may 
be inde > the ATC or 
IATA. That means he would 
not be allowed to issue tickets 
on any airline. That's not a 
threat. That's a promise. 


In addition, travel agents 
take many of those glamorous 
familiarization trips every year. 
The difference between your 
glamorous tipand hisisthaton 
Fisuitp, he may check out five or 
six hotelsin one day. He looksat 
singles, doubles, twins, suites, 
restaurants, bars, convention 
facilities, kitchens, chefs, man- 
agement—all ina single day ina 
single city. That may not be fun 
for him, but that’s not the pur- 

wc. It's to make a better trip 
or you. Would your Uncle 


rapidly and the field team is 
asking for 200,000 sheets of 
this material. 

Oxfam-Canada West is ur- 
gently soliciting financial 
assistance for its purchase 
from the least expensive 
source nearest Guatemala. 
Help the homeless put a 
safe, dry roof over their 
heads. 

Please donate to OXFAM- 
Canada (Guatemala) c/o 
OXFAM, Box 12000, Calgary 
T2P 2M7; Edmonton TSJ 
2R4. All donors will receive 
official receipts for tax 


purposes. 


1 
here’s a free bee... 


pay 


agent. 


Harokd do that for you? 


One more thing. If you do 
have a travel agent and you do 
have problems on your trip, 
vou also have a built-in toh. 
lem solver. Because, believe us, 
we listen totravelagents. When 
they have a problem, we have a 
problem and those problems 
get solved, Ina hurry. 


How do you choose 
a travel agent? 


You would ask that ques- 
tion. Choosing the right travel 
agent is like choosing the right 
doctor, lawver, architect or 
CPA-except vour travel agent 
doesn cost vou anything. 

Your best bet is to shop 
around. Ask friends. Look in 
the Yellow Pages. Look for 
agents who specialize in the 
destinations vou choose. There 
are momand popagents. Giant 
oe agents. Specialists 
in business and particular 
countries, Package tour spe- 
ciatlists 

Choose one that vou're 
comlortable with. But which- 
ever vou choose, vou'll be fur- 
ther ahead if vou do go with a 
travel agent. 

And what have vou got to 
loses Nothing. 


HELTEN 
TRAVEL 


Edmonton, Alberta 
9511 - 63rd Avenue 
459-6661 


St. Albert, Alberta 


11 Perron Street 


town of St. Albert 


ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1976 - 19 


hil allie 


LS gem 
(Tes 


N ..Your 

: cuenue 0. 
i an expanding 
{>and exciting 


LoS market ares. 


BusBY 
WY), PICAR DVILLE ry 


he 


20 - ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1976. 


Qo 
Classifieds that really work for you 
News about your town and 
its residents 
Sports programs, upcoming events 


& results 


| Published every Wednesday 
Carrier delivery in St. Albert and Morinville - 


Also available at 
Chris's, 7-Eleven, Mac's, Red Rooster Stores, & St. Albert Inn 


For more imformation please phone 458-2240 


© 


Seles 


Comets meet 
Westlock in 
Provincials Friday 


The first game of a 
two-game total goal series 
between St. Albert Comets 
and Westlock Eagles will be 
played this Friday in the St. 
Albert and District Arena at 
7:30 p.m. 

The second game of the 
Zone 3 provincial inter- 
mediate playoffs will be 
played in Westlock Sunday 
afternoon starting at 2 p.m. 

Comets advanced to their 
zone finals by taking out 
Drayton Valley Rebels while 
Westlock edged out Edmon- 
ton Bruins in the other 
series, 

The winner of this series 
will remain in the ‘‘A”’ 


category while the loser 
drops into ‘‘B’’ section. ' 

Inter-zone playoffs betw- 
een Zone 3 and Zone 2 which 
has teams from Fort Saska- 
tchewan, Fort McMurray, 
Sherwood Park and Lloyd- 
minster have to be completed 
by March 23. 

The Alberta championship 
series has to be completed by 
April 4 as the inter-provincial 
series with British Columbia 
is set for April 10-11-12 and 
13th, 

Comets have an excellent 
chance to represent Alberta 
and their series against 
Westlock should be a great 
one for the fans. 


St. Albert wins 
Senior Legion 
Provincials 


The St. Albert rink of the 
Royal Canadian Legion att- 
ended the Senior Legion 
Provincial Playdowns at 
Beaverlodge last weekend, 
March 5, 6 and 7, and 
returned home victorious. 

Teams from St. Albert, 
Beaverlodge, Lethbridge, 
Hanna, Vegreville and La- 
combe attended the tourna- 
ment, The North West Terri- 
tories team, that was sche- 
duled to play, was unable to 
make it. 

Members of the St. Albert 


team were: Skip - Lorne 
Brothen, 3rd - Elymer 
Beisiegel, 2nd - Bill Eschak, 
and lead - Lou Reaugh. 

The St. Albert team lost 
their first game to Bea- 
verlodge but from then on 
they were unbeatable. Their 
last game was a sudden 
death encounter with Bea- 
verlodge which they won by a 
score of 8-6. 

The St. Albert team will 
now go on to the Western 
Canadian Playoffs in Moose 
Jaw on March 27 and 28. 


Park meets Fort 
in Junior playoff 


Sherwood Park Knights 
defeated Stony Plain Flyers 
10-1 in the fifth game of their 
best of seven series to win 
four games to one. 

Knights now meet Fort 
Saskatchewan Traders ina 
best of seven series for the 
Capital Junior Hockey Lea- 
gue championship. 

Traders eliminated ‘St. 
Albert Bruins in four straight 


games to advance to the 
finals. 

The opening game of the 
finals in the Fort Sunday saw 
Sherwood Park score a con- 
vincing 9-1 win to take a 
one-game lead. 

The series now shifts to 
Sherwood Park for the 
second game Friday night. 
The third will be played 
Saturday night in the Fort. 


A win by Generals tonight 


would 
with Jes 


Standard Generals are atl 


home tonight (7:30 p.m.) for 


the sixth playoff game in 
their best of seven semi-final 
series against Jasper Moun- 
taineers. They have three 
wins and two losses. 

Generals after winning 


their first two games at home™ 


7-3 and 7-6, travelled to 
Jasper Friday night and won 
7-4 to take a 3-0 lead in the 
series. 

Because of no rooms avail- 
able in Jasper, the team had 
to stay at Hinton (50 miles 
away) and commute. 

Saturday night Generals 
lost a close 5-4 game which 
kept Jasper in the series, and 
their momentum carried over 
to Sunday when they won 7-3 
to narrow General’s lead 3-2. 

The three games in Jasper 
were very physical. Jasper 
came out hitting everything 
in sight and they didn’t care 
which way they did it. The 
refereeing left something to 
be desired as did the goal 
judges who failed to put the 
light on for five different 
General goals. One came on 
Saturday night to tie the 
score with a minute to play. 

Coach John Ewen was very 
proud of all his team for the 
manner in which they con- 
tained themselves both on 
and off the ice. 

In the second game of the 
series Thursday night in St. 
Albert, local hockey fans 
probably witnessed the best 
played game of the season 
which saw a total of 13 goals 
scored in the wide-open 
game. 

Generals jumped into a 3-0 
lead early in the third period 
on goals by Roger Meunier, 
Pat Frewer and Dennis 
Gagne. 

By the end of the period 
Jasper bounced back and 
scored four straight goals to 
take a 4-3 lead going into the 


enough to win the game wit 
only 45 seconds left to play. 

Coach Ewen pulled his 
goaltender for a sixth atta- 
cker and the move payed off 
as Gary Ferguson scored 
with only 12 seconds left on 
the clock. 

The game then went into a 
straight 10 minute overtime 
which saw both teams play 
excellent checking hockey. 
No goals were scored and a 
10 minute sudden death 
period was started. 

Both clubs had some ex- 
cellent chances but the 
goalies were very sharp. 


4. 


MATT LISTER 


At 6.53 Matt Lister scoop- 
ed in a loose puck in a 
goal-mouth scramble to end 
the game 7-6. The 425 fans 
(largest crowd of the season) 
gave both teams a standing 
ovation for some excellent 
entertainment. 

The following day the team 
left for Jasper and the third 
game of the best of seven 


Sapte 


series, 

Things looked bad for the 
Generals as they found 
themselves down 4-0 after 
the first 20 minutes of play. 

Generals, who refuse to 
quit regardless of the situa- 
tion, fought back on goals by 
Gil Bilodeau, Matt Lister, 
Barry Medori and Claude 
Regimbald to tie the score at 
the end of the second period. 

Lister scored early in the 
third for the winning goal 
while Medori and Dennis 
Gagne added insurance mar- 
kers. 

Generals, after the first 
period of play, controlled the 
game and outshot Jasper 53 
to 32. 

As usual local referee 
Mike Bugaida overlooked a 
lot of Jasper high-sticking 
and butt-ending which re- 
sulted in five or six St. Albert 
players requiring stitches. 
Generals also scored two 
other goals which the goal 
judge would not turn the 
light on for. 

Because of no accommo- 
dation in Jasper (skiers) the 
team had to bus back to 
Hinton to sleep. Saturday 
night they fell behind 2-0 
early in the first period but 
fought back on goals by 
Roger Meunier and Dennis 
Gagne to tie it midway into 
the second period. Jasper 
added three more seconc 
period goals to take a 5-2 
lead going into the final 
period of play. 

With their backs to the 


_wall, Generals once again 


came back on goals by 
Meunier and Lister. With 


Soccer 


The Bantam Premier Soc: 
cer team, coached by Her- 
man Kochan has come up 
with a plan for turning Cleats 


> ee 


JOHN EWEN, COACH OF THE STANDARD GENERALS would like to see more of the above action in tonight’s game 
against the Jasper Mountaineers. Terry Kieser [12] has just let a shot go that beat Jasper goalie in last Thursday’s game 
that saw Generals win 7-6 in overtime. St. Albert leads the best of seven series three games w two. 


__p tough series 


five minutes left to play they 
were down only one goal, 
5-4. Generals scored with a 
minute left to play but the 
goal judge would not turn the 
red light on and disallowed 
the goal. Time ran out and 
Generals lost. They again 
outshot Jasper 57-31. The 
refereeing improved 100% 
and fans were treated to 
some excellent hockey. 

Playing their fifth game in 
as many days plus the tra- 
velling finally showed on the 
Generals as they lost 7-3 
Sunday. Lister, Kieser and 
Frewer were the Generals 
scorers while Rick Green- 
wood had four for Jasper. 

Should Generals lose to- 
night, the seventh game will 
be played tomorrow night in 
St. Albert at 7:30 p.m. 

If Generals win they will 
go against Edson Arrows 
who took out Hinton Car- 
dinals four straight, in the 
west finals. Opening games 


would probably be this 
weekend in Edson. 
PLAYOFF SCORING ONLY 
GAP 
IM EASTON sien ge are 73 10 
By M@GOtis i eae sc ae 
R. Meunier ........ 43 7 
D; Gagne ss. os. 0 et Va) 
P. Frewer ......... @: 2508 
PA MIOSER i368 ob ols care 7 ap eS 
S. Ballentine ....... 12.8 
M. McLaren ....... 03:3 
G. Ferguson ....... i Uy | 
C. Regimbald ...... L-.-2 
Cy Hatiatt: cis css 02 2 
G. Bilodeau ........ His + ae | 
I. Langridge ....... Nec a | 
ie 6 1 1) Raa ier Saat OT 3 
G; Thibert:........:. 01 1 


Lovers 


into Cash and is planning a 
self-serve sale at the Grenfell 
Clubhouse on April 3. The 
Please Turn to Page 2? 


Me ee ae | 


my 


ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1976 - 21 


Comets eliminate Eagles in rough play 


St. Albert Comets. scored 
8-1 and 4-3 wins over Stony 
Plain Eagles Friday and 
Sunday to take the best of 
five semi-final league playoff 
series three games to one. 

Comets won the opener 8-3 
but Stony came back to take 
the second 6-3. 

The third game was played 
in St. Albert Thursday night 
before a good crowd that saw 
Comets completely dominate 
the play from start to finish. 


Comets led 1-0 after the 
first period on Perry Pearn’s 
goal and increased it to 5-1 
after two periods as Blaine 
Georgy, Brian Stevens, Rich 
Perrault and Perry Pearn 
scored, 

Len Haley scored Eagles 
only goal early in the period 
to tie the game 1-1 but that 
was all that netminder Zane 
Jacubec allowed as he played 
brilliantly in goal for St. 
Albert. 


Ladies curling 
nears wind-up 


Out of the nine St. Albert 
rinks that competed in this 
year’s Ladies Northern Ch- 
ampionships, only the Anita 
Hunter rink managed to get 
into the prizes. The other 
eight rinks were headed by: 
Nan Whelan, Olga Kom- 
ariski, Bernice Cook, Betty 
Fenton, Gwen Peuch, Dot 
Lait and Rose Fraser, who 
had won the Points Competi- 
iion in the club. 

The St. Albert ladies did 
however win over all the 
curlers at the banquet, which 
was held at the Convention 
Inn South. The St. Albert 
Ladies Club provided the 
entertainment for the ban- 
quet, in the form of a melo- 


FLEA MARKET 


SUNDAY, MARCH 14th -- 1-5 P.M. 
COMMUNITY HALL -- PERRON STREET 


drama. The gals really 
brought down the house and 
were met with thunderous 
applause following their very 
professional performance. 

On the 24th of this month, 
the women will again hit the 
Stage as they perform the 
melodrama at their windup 
banquet. 

The finals in the club 
playdowns are underway, 
with the winner of the A 
Event able to move on to the 
Tournament of Champions, 
which will start on March 16. 
For some exciting curling 
action, drop down to the St. 
Albert Curling Arena tonight 
and watch the ladies battle it 
oul, 


VALUE OPTICAL 


_-~ a pau ang yonn 
Phelan added the other. 

The game was very rough- 
ly played with Eagles getting 
five fighting penalties to St. 
Albert’s four. Eagles came 
out on the bottom in the 
fights as they did in the 
scoring. 

Sunday afternoon in Stony 
Plain saw the hometown 
Eagles ahead 3-0 after the 
first period of play and 
Eagles coach Mickey Check- 
nita was all smiles as he felt 
he had the Comet’s number. 

By the end of the second 
period the smile had left as 
Comets stormed back with 
three goals in the period to 
tie the game. Bob Beaulieu, 
Brian Georgy and Dave 
Glasgow scored in that order. 

To add insult to injury, 
John Phelan scored on a 
breakaway for the Comets at 
13.34 while killing off a 
slashing penalty to team- 
mate Blaine Georgy. 

The goal was the winner 
and it took the steam out of 
the Eagles on the ice. 
However Stony started a 


minor riot as soon as the 
period ended. 

They also lost both fights 
as Blaine George took care of 
Craig Wolansky and Sam 
Belcourt had his clock clean- 


ed by Paul St. Cyr. 

One of the Eagles players 
showed his true colour by 
hitting a St. Albert fan 
(woman) with his stick. 
Comets can be proud of their 


coach and players for the way 
the situation was handled. 

Referee Hatvey Dodds 
who has had his problems 
lately called an excellent 
game. 


Canucks win Boyle 
tournament 


The St. Albert Canucks 
travelled to Boyle Sunday for 
the bantam hockey tourna- 
ment. They won their first 
game 7-6 over Boyle, 28 
seconds into sudden death 
overtime. 

They then advanced to the 
final game with the Mission 
Bantams who won over Pla- 
mondon 12-1 earlier in the 


day. St. Albert defeated 
Mission 9-2 to win the 
ournament. 

The mayor of Boyle pre- 
sented Jim Sawchuk, captain 
of the Canucks with the 
tournament trophy. The Bo- 
yle Community League trea- 
ted the Canucks to hot dogs 
and refreshments. 

Players travelling to Boyle: 


Harold, Brubaker, Blain 
Muzichuk, Chris Simpson, 
Duane Kowalchuk, Bruce 
Roy, Dale Kowalchuk, James 
Emson, Gary Kuhn, Barry 
Thachuk, Hugh Edmundson, 
Jim Sawchuk and Ken Frier, 
Coaches: George Amyotte 
and Jim Pierce. 


Soccer practices 


Boys and girls of all age 
groups are welcome to attend 
soccer practices in Sir Geor- 
ge Simpson School. These 
practices are to teach the 
children the basics of soccer 
and at the same time to 
sclect the travelling teams. 


SCHEDULE 


Mini Mites - born in 1968 
and 1969 - Friday 6:30 to 8. 
Girls gym. 

Mites - born in 1967 and 
1966 - Friday, 8:00 to 9:30. 
Boys gym. 

Peewees - born in 1964 and 
1965 - Friday, 8:00 to 9:30. 


Girls gym. 

Bantams - born in 1962 
and 1963 - Friday, 8:00 to 
9:30 Boys gym. 

Midgets - born in 1960 and 
1961 - Tuesday 8:00 to 9:30. 
Girls gym. 


Girls in all age groups - 
Tuesday 6:30 to 8:00 p.m. 

All boys and girls that 
have their uniforms from last 
year al home are asked to 
bring them to the gym and 
ask for Herman. 


Soccer 


Cont'd From Page 21 
team offers to sell soccer 
cleats for interested people 
for a 10 per cent fee, with a 
minimum of 50 cents. 

Or alternatively soccer 
people can turn their Cash 
into Cleats for a reasonable 
outlay. 


NOW OPEN 


109A STURGEON PLAZA SHOPPING CENTRE 
PHONE 458-2508 


The sale, planned in the 
spring cleaning season sh- 
ould serve as a_ useful 
clearing exchange for soccer 
cleats, and the project will 
add to the coffers on the 
team. 


Complete Optical Services at a price 
that's more than competitive. 


Monday through Saturday 


10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. 
Thursday & Friday evenings til’ 


8 p.m. 


22 -ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1976, 


Balers gain berth in Provincial Tourney 


The Peewee BB Balers 
from St. Albert, eliminated 
the Leduc Elks this weekend 
outscoring them 5-1 on 
Saturday and 7-3 on Sunday. 
It was a two-game total goal 
series for the right to repre- 
sent this zone in the provin- 
cial tournament later this 
month. 

On Saturday in the St. 
Albert Arena the Balers 
pressed hard from the open- 
ing whistle and completely 
outplayed and outshot the 
visitors in the first period to 
lead 2-0. 

Ricky Gray got the Balers 
on the scoreboard on a pass 
from Ken Myck. Before the 
period ended Myck scored 
unassisted following a rink 
long rush and a good shot 
from just outside their blue- 
line. Without excellent goal- 
tending by Michael Fix in the 
Leduc net it easily could have 
been a S to 0 lead. Leduc 
scored early in the second 
period, to pull within one 
goal, however Ricky Gray got 
the Balers going again on a 
pass from Scott Holliday and 
Paul Kelly. Leduc were 
unable to beat John Sexsmith 
in the Balers net for the 


remainder of the game as the 
Balers added two more 
without a reply. Don White 
scored the fourth Baler goal 
on a perfect pass from Brent 
Weller. 

Rounding out the scoring 
for the Balers was Paul Kelly 
on a relay from Ricky Gray. 
Balers outshot the visitors 29 
to 23 with both Sexsmith and 
Fix playing exceptionally 
well. 

On Sunday the Balers 
travelled to Leduc with a 
comfortable four goal lead. 
They apparently were not 
satisfied and picked up 
where they left off the day 
before, building up a3 tol 
first period lead. They con- 
tinued to pour it on and 
ended up 7 to 3 winners for a 
two-game total goals of 12 for 
and four against for the 
series. 

Brad Hammett paced the 
Balers with two goals, 
assisted by Brent Weller, 
Dan Laplante and Dennis 
O'Neil. Other goal-getters 
for the Balers were Paul 
Kelly ona pass from Ricky 
Gray, Dan Laplante from 
Ricky Gray and Jamie 


St. Albert 
Recreation Report 


From the St. Albert Parks 
and Recreation Department 


VARIETY CONCERT 


On Sunday, March 14 at 
2:30 p.m., the Leo Green 
Singers will be presenting a 
variety concert at the St. 
Albert Parish. The singers 
will be touring Europe 
during July and August, so 
here's an opportunity to hear 
them live. Donations will be 
accepted at the door. The 
concert is sponsored by the 
St. Albert Knights of Colum- 
bus and Alberta Culture. 


NORDIC SKI CLUB 


The club will be spon-, 


soring a chili roast at Elk 
Island Park on Sunday, 
March 14. All members are 
invited to attend and your 
friends-are welcome at a 
small nominal charge. Meet- 
ing time will be noon at Elk 
Island when lunch will be 
taken (bring your own). 
Events will be arranged for 
the afternoon in which 
everybody will be able to 
participate no matter what 
your level of X-country skiing 
is. The day will conclude with 
a chili roast supplied by the 
club. To enable us to make 
adequate arrangements pl- 
ease advise your co-ordinator 
of your intention to par- 
ticipate no later than 9 p.m. 
Thursday, March 11, 1976. 
The co-ordinators are: ‘‘The 
Fabs’? Dominic Willott 458- 
2587; the ‘‘Grandin Clid- 
ders’ Doreen Patterson 459- 
8578; and the ‘‘Bishops”’ 
Nick Chernuka 458-1875. 


PUBLIC SKATING 


In order to allow the 
Standard Generals the opp- 
ortunity to finish their play- 
offs, public skating will be 
cancelled on Wednesday 
evening from 7:00 - 8:30. The 
next regularly scheduled 
public skating time will be 
Saturday from 2:30 - 4 p.m. 


BASEBALL REGISTRATION 


The St. Albert Minor 
Baseball Association ann- 
ounces that registration for 
spring and summer baseball 
will be held at Robert Rundle 
Foyer March 27 and April 6 
from 10 a.m. to 12 noon. Any 
person interested in volun- 
teering should contact Mr. 
G. Samagalski at 459-5247. 
Positions as coaches and 
director for T-Ball are open. 
If baseball is to operate 
successfully this season, 
your active participation will 
be required. 


SPRING CALENDAR 


On April 5, the 1976 
Spring Calendar of recrea- 
lion activities and Further 
Education Courses will be 
delivered to householders 
served by the St. Albert Post 
Office. Anyone who does not 
receive their mail through St. 
Albert Post Office but would 
like a copy of the calendar, 
please phone 459-6601 and 
leave us your address. A 
calendar will be forwarded to 
you. This season the calen- 
dar will be yellow with blue 
print. 


KIN T.V. BINGO CARDS AVAILABLE AT 


CANADA SAFEWAY 
RED ROOSTER [STURGEON PLAZA] 


RED ROOSTER [McKenney Ave. LACOMBE PARK] 
POP SHOPPE [STURGEON PLAZA] 
ST. ALBERT PHARMACY [PERRON ST.]} 


Sander. Gray then scored 
one himself, with Hammett 
assisting. 

Ken Myck scored on a 
blistering slapshot that 
caught the inside of the post 
and behind the Leduc goal- 
tender. Defenceman Scott 


Holliday then blasted one _ 


from the point on a pass back 


from Dean Clark. Ron Malo 4 


was in the nets on Sunday 
handling 16 shots including a 
break-away by their ace 
forward Hickey. Ron stood 
his ground and came up with 
an exceptional save. 

The Balers are now idle in 
Provincial play until the 
tournament on March 19, 20 
and 21 when Drumheller, 
Brooks, Grande Prairie, Sh- 
erwood Park, Lethbridge, 
Medicine Hat and St. Albert 
play a double. modified 
knockout tournament for the 
Provincial championship. 

In the meantime the Balers 
continue play this Saturday, 
march 13 against a good 
strong team from Ardrossan 
in a best of three series for 
the championship. First ga- 
me is slated for the St. Albert 
Arena at 11:45. 


LEARN-TO-GOLF 


A learn-to-golf program 
will be offered at Sir George 
Simpson School with the first 
class being held on Thurs- 
day, March 2S at 7 p.m., 
when there will be films and 
general discussion. 

From March 27, those 
registering will have a choice 
on Saturdays of lessons from 
9:30 - 10:30, 10:45 - 11:45 or 
from 12-1 p.m., and on 
Thursdays the choice is be- 
ween 6:30 - 7:30, 7:45 - 8:45 
and 9-10 p.m. Last class will 
be April 13. 

Fees are $10 for adults and 
$8 for students. 

Equipment will be pro- 
vided but participants are 
required to wear soft-soled 
shoes. Registrations, accom- 
panied by fees, will be 
accepted at the Town Hall 
Parks and Recreation office 
until MARCH 19 at 5 p.m. 

Instructors Mike Tomash 
and Roger Klatt utilize the 
Bertholy Method, a unique 
system developed over 35 
years of teaching. 


SOCCER & SOFTBALL 
REGISTRATION 


The Hercules Sports Asso- 
ciation anfiounces that re- 
gistration for soccer will be 
March 16 and for softball on 
March !6 and 23 from 6 - 9 
p.m., at the following loca- 
tions: Sir George Simpson, 
Father Jan and Vital Grandin 
Schools. 


SMOKE 
DETECTOR 


POWERFUL 
AWAKENING ALARM 
ALERTS YOU TO 
SMOKE AND FIRE 


PHONE: 459-8239 


Pictured above are from left to right: Ricky Gray, Brian Hunt, Brent Weller and Denis 
O’Neill, of the St. Albert Balers. They will be seen in action in the upcoming Provincial 
Peewee ‘A’ tournament. This tournament will be held at the St. Albert Arena on March 19, 
20 and 21. Other teams entered in the tournament are from Lethbridge, Brooks, Drumheller, 
Red Deer, Sherwood Park and Grande Prairie. The winner of this tournament will determine 
the Provincial Peewee ‘‘A’’ champions. 


ST. ALBERT PARISH KINDERGARTEN 
REGISTRATION 


FIRST COME, FIRST SERVED 


Registration for the 1976-77 year will take place from March Ist to April Ist, 1976. The 
Registration fee is $5.00. 


Registration forms and an information letter are available at the St. Albert Public 
Library or the St. Albert Public School District No. 3 office, at 6 St. Vital Avenue, St. 
Albert. 


NOTE: NO FORMS AVAILABLE AT THE KINDERGARTEN 


Children being registered must be five years of age before March Ist, 1977, without 
exception. 


The form must be completed and mailed together with the registration fee, to be 
received no later than April Ist, 1976. 


Sinty C8 Plas 
Good banking 


for good living — 
: after sixty. 


If you’re sixty years old or 
better, you're entitled to a 
sixty-plus, the Royal Bank's 
new bundle of special bank- 
ing privileges. Free. 


Some of these privileges are: 
— No service charge for 
chequing, bill payment ser- 
vices, or traveller's cheques. 
— A specially designed 
cheque book that gives you 
a permanent copy. 

— A $5 annual discount 
on a Safe Deposit Box or 
Safekeeping Service. 

— A special Bonus Sav- 
ings Deposit Service with in- 
terest linked to the Consumer 
Price Index. 

— Special term deposit 
that pays high interest monthly 
with flexible redemption privi- 
leges. 

So come on in and see me 
or one of my staff today. Or, 
if you'd prefer, give me a call. 


£58 ROYAL BANK 


serving Alberta 


FRAN BEAUDOIN 
Lacombe Park branch 
PHONE: 458-1529 


ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1976 - 23 


Coping with drifting | 


The serious soil drifting in 
southwestern Alberta has led 
the Head of Alberta’s Soils 
Branch Adolph Goettel to 
urge farmers to inspect their 
fields regularly and to take 
emergency measures when 
necessary. 

Serious soil drifting has 
been going on in the south- 
western part of the province 
for several months now and it 
could continue for another 
three months till the spring 
crops emerge. 

Farmers are advised to 
cultivate only alternate strips 
across the fields so that they 
run counter to the prevailing 
wind. 

When frozen or moist soil 


is below drifting surface soil, 
it is suggested that clods be 
brought to the surface by 
removing half to two-thirds 
of the shanks on an ordinary 
cultivator. 

Where the soil is sandy or 
loose, soil should be ridged 
with a plow or road grader or 
manure and straw should be 
placed on the soil surface. 

Farmers in Alberta are 
legally responsible under 
Alberta’s Soil Conservation 
Act for preventing the soil 
from drifting and all munici- 
pal agricultural fieldmen are 
soil conservation offices and 
have the authority to enforce 
the act. 


St. Albert 
favours regional 


ambulance 


system 


S1. Albert will probably not 
go for its own emergency 
ambulance service and will 
rely on satellite emergency 
units in Bon Accord and 
Morinville before merging 
into a regional ambulance 
system. 

That was the outcome of a 
meeting held in Bon Accord 
last Saturday attended: by a 
total of 15 delegates from St. 
Albert, the Sturgeon Hospit- 
al Board, Bon Accord, Legal, 
Radway village and hospital 
board, the County of Thor- 
hild and Redwater. 

The aim of the meeting 
was to set up two area 
administrative boards, Thor- 
hild and Sturgeon, for a 
proposed regional emergen- 
cy ambulance service. The 
meeting was called by the 
Superintendent of the St. 
John Ambulance Emergency 
Service Nigel Mansfield of 
Bon Accord. 

He confirmed that St. 
Albert could not see itself 
having its own service, the 
only way to go was in a 
regional system which would 
rely on satellite units to 
support its own rvice 
within the rural areas. 

The secondary aim of the 
meeting was to show how a 


regional ambulance service 
operated based on the 
success of the three other 
tural paramedic services in 
the province. These are 
based at Grande Prairie, 
High River, and Brooks. 

Guest speaker at the 
meeting, Garry Alford, a 
registered paramedic and 
director of the Brooks Dis- 
trict Ambulance Service des- 
cribed the basics of a 
regional ambulance system. 

The meeting also looked at 
control of the regional 
system via-a board. Dele- 
gates were also informed 
about modern emergency 
care criteria and were told 
that the popular notion of the 
ambulance as just pickup and 
lransport service was out- 
dated. 

It will be some time yet 
before the area administra- 
tion boards are set up. Mr. 
Mansfield said that dele- 
gates will report back on the 
meeting to their councils and 
boards and then a steering 
committee will be set up 
before the area boards take 
shape. 

At the moment, 22 people 
are manning the emergency 
ambulance units in Bon 
Accord and Morinville. 


Blue tongue 
problem wanning 


Representatives from most 
breed associations in Canada 
recently met with Dr. Ken 
Wells, assistant deputy min- 
ister, Health of Animals 
Branch, and other senior 
officials to discuss the curr- 
ent difficulties regarding 
blue tongue disease crossing 
the Canadian-American bor- 
der. 

They were informed by Dr. 
Wells that the American 
veterinary officials are in 
sympathy with the Canadian 
move to require additional 
testing of cattle moving 
north, to eliminate the 
possibility of blue tongue 
infecting cattle entering this 
country. 

Other reports indicated 
that some of the concern 
previously expressed by 
American cattlemen was 


24-S8T. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, 


declining since they had 
been informed of the nature 
of the problem and the 
procedure by which the 
Canadian restrictions had 
been enforced. 

JIBAC (Joint Import Bre- 
eds Advisory Committee) 
representatives felt the mee- 
ling resolyed a number of 
questions and in a joint 
meeting of the Canadian 
Cattlemen’s Association 
Seedstock Committee the 
same day, a move was made 
to support the Canadian Cat- 
tlemen’s position with res- 
pect to blue tongue and that 
position endorsed the Cana- 
dian Government’s action. 

It provides an avenue for 
further evaluation should the 
Canadian cattle population 
appear to have some blue 
tongue after further testing. 


NEW FOLKS MOVING IN! The community of Gibbons has indeed seen a lot of changes in the past few years, but perhaps 
the most noticeable of all, are the many new faces that have been arriving in the new subdivisions, such as the people who 
‘were moving into this house last Thursday. 


Biggest meeting about cattle ever 


What has been termed the 
biggest meeting about cattle 
in history - the 7th World 
Hereford Conference - is 
slated for Banff, June 18 to 
July 18. 

An estimated 500 repre- 
sentatives from 30 overseas 
countries, plus an estimated 
1,000 Canadians and Ameri- 
cans are. expected for the 
actual conference, with many 
more joining local tours and 
events across Canada. 

Members of the agricul- 
tural community in and 
around St. Albert and the 
MD of Sturgeon will no doubt 


be interested in this signifi- 
cant event. 

Five day tours to Alberta 
ranches will prgcede the 800 
head International Hereford 
show July 8 and 9 at 
Siampede Park Calgary at 
the same time as the Calgary 
Stampede. 

The timing of the con- 
ference is ‘perfect for Cana- 
dian cattlemen and should 
pave the way for increasingly 
open international under- 
standing and trade in beef 
seedstock. 

Plans for the big summer 
gathering in Calgary were 
discussed last month in 


Regina at the 86th Canadian 
Hereford Association annual 
meeting. This meeting was 
attended by Secretary Gen- 
eral of the World Hereford 
Council Tony Morrison who 
says that Canadians are 
helping out in the challenge 
\o feed a hungry world. 

He said that ‘the world is 
not simply hungry for food ... 
it is hungry for protein. 
There is no better source 
than cattle. The many 
millions of Hereford cattle 
now found completely round 
the globe are an excellent 
source of self-help protein for 
developing nations. That's 


Board appeals ceiling 
on outpatient care 


At a special meeting 
March 3 the Sturgeon Hosp- 
ital Board appealed a provin- 
cial government ceiling of 
$330,275 on this year’s 
outpatients budget. 

Hospital Administrator 
Cliff Keyes said Friday that 
the government has said this 
would be the maximum and 
remains identical to last 
year’s figure. 

The board also voted an 
eight per cent increase in 
salary for management and 
administrative staff at the 
Sturgeon General Hospital 
backdated to January Ist. 

At a previous board meet- 
ing February 25th the board 


had decided to hold off with 
the increase till the budget 
question had been’ discussed 
in more detail. 

On the question of the 
imposed ceiling on the out- 
patient's budget, the board 
will now appeal against the 
$330,275 limit when it con- 
tacts the Alberta Hospital 
Services Commission on the 
recommendation of the hos- 
pital administrator. 

Mr. Keyes recently draf- 
ted a letter to draw the 
AHSC’s attention to the fact 
it was not realistic to put a 
ceiling on outpatient care 
‘*as this is contrary to the 
philosophy we have here."’ 


Goat breeders hold 


- first Alberta 
convention 


The Canadian Goat Bree- 
ders convention 1976 will be 
held for the first time in 
Alberta May Ist at Molson 
House. 

One of the guest speakers 
at the convention will be Dr. 
Al Oeming. 

This convention is a must 


MARCH 10, 1976. 


for goat breeders in the area, 
from Bon Accord, Bruder- 
heim, Legal and Horse Hill. 
If you require more infor- 
mation on the convention, 
phone Ruth Mausolf, editor 
of the Alberta Goat Breeding 
Association, at 973-3777, 


Mr. Keyes said ‘‘we want 
that ceiling lifted.’’ 

“Our board is not in- 
terested in cutting back on 
service or growth, we'll give 
the most and best care we 
can,’’ he added. ® 

The Sturgeon Hospital 
Board has just under two 
weeks to make the appeal to 
the AHSC. 

This year’s budget for the 
Sturgeon General Hospital is 
$2,225,290 almost $% mill- 
ion up on last year. 


why tt is so important for 
Hereford breeders to have 
large international meetings 
of this nature, and to share 
vital information, to learn 
each other’s problems." 

The conference agenda 
will feature presentations by 
scientists from several coun- 
tries on health and genetic 
advances in the cattle in- 
dustry. 

In the past 10 years it is 
reported that Canada has 
exported 27,000 seedstock 
animals to 17 countries in the 
past 10 years and that 
“Canadian Herefords are a 
large and hardy type... in 
wide demand"’ and ‘'Cana- 
dian animal health conditions 
are among the highest in the 
world.’ 

When asked why other 
breeds would not satisfy 
overseas markets just as 
well, Mr. Morrison felt 
“there are many reasons in 
the characteristics of the 
Hereford animal but 
perhaps the main reason is 
simply numbers ... the over- 
whelming numerical majority 
of Herefords around the 
world means greater 
breeding predictability. Nei- 
ther poor countries ... nor in 
these times, rich countries 
can afford a genetic guessing 
game."' 

Attendance at the tours 
and conference is open to all 
Hereford breeders the world 
over. 


Liquid manure 
removal is simple 


Results of a study carriéd 
out by Alberta Agriculture's 
engineering and home de- 
sign branch show that it is 
possible to remove liquid 
manure from a livestock 
lagoon efficiently and rapid- 
ly. 

The study was conducted 
recently at Valley Farms 
north of Edmonton to de- 
velop better techniques for 
handling and disposing li- 
quid hog manure from 
dugout lagoons, 

An irrigation pump forces 
the liquid manure through a 
Six inch irrigation pipe to a 
manure gun located in a field 


as far as half a mile away. 

The gun can spread the 
manure al a rate of 600 
gallons per minute over a 
circular area of between 400 
to 500 feet. The gun is 
capable of passing one to 
three-quarter inch solids. 

The study results show 
that a mixing and sprinkler 
irrigation system can provide 
a workable method of dis- 
posing liquid animal wastes 
in medium to large size hog 
operations. 

The system at Valley 
Farms makes for effective 
and rapid removal of liquid 
manure on a semi-annual of 
annual basis. 


By Marg Bentz 
The next meeting of the 
United Church Ladies Aid 
will be held on Tuesday, 
March 16, at the home of 
Mrs. Rita Barilla. The 
meeting starts at 8 p.m., and 
all ladies are welcome. For 
further information please 
call Jean Robinson at 939- 
4153. 


The School District annual 


meeting will be held Wed- 
nesday, March 24, at 8 p.m., 
at the Georges P. Vanier 
High School, Music Room, 
The School Board urges 
everyone to make an effort to 
attend. 


Don and Betty McGrath 
are pleased to announce the 
arrival of their son, Geoffrey 
Sean, born February 24 at 
9:19 p.m. Geoffrey, born at 


Morinville Sports 


SENIOR HOCKEY 


The 1975-76 hockey season 
came to an abrupt halt at 
10:55 p.m., on March 2 for 
the Morinville Motors Senior 
hockey team when they were 
upset 10-S by the fourth 
place Legal Canadiens in 
Sturgeon Valley Hockey Lea- 
gue playoff action. Legal won 
the best of five semi-finals 
three games to two. 

Canadiens jumped to an 
early two goal lead and 
ended the first period 2-0. 
' Morinville tied the score 
briefly in the second stanza 
only to have Legal re-impose 
the two goal margin ending 
the second 4-2. Ed St. 
Laurent and Richard Wright 
scored the goals. The third 
period saw the visitors 
double the production of 
O'Neil Chevalier, Randy La- 
Belle and Carl Royan to take 
the game 10-5, 

Disappointment was, evi- 
dent on the faces of the 
Morinville players and their 
side of the capacity crowd; 
however each contest must 
generate a winner and a 
loser. Consolation can be 
taken from this series with 
Legal that typified the fast, 
hard action of the Sturgeon 
Valley Hockey League and 
was certainly a most enter- 
taining package. Regretably 
for both fans and players it 
ended our post season play. 
The players, coaches and 
management of the Morin- 
ville Motors Seniors wish to 
express their thanks for the 
support and encouragement 
of their many followers. 


MINOR HOCKEY 


Shaver B lost to Namao 3-2 
Sunday; Riel St. Laurent and 
Kevin Lalonde scored the 
goals. 

Mite B beat the visiting 
Westlock team 3-1 on Friday 
with goals by Jay Enright 
(assist Darvin Hansen), Cas- 
ey Bentz (assist Andrew 
Hittinger) and Darvin Han- 
sen (assist Darin Ellis). 
Roger St. Laurent came 
within one of his shutout bid. 

Mite A took the first game 
of their two-game total point 
final series with Bon Accord 
10-4, Chris Bokenfohr picked 
up six goals en route to the 
win while Marshal Lalonde 
fired two and Rickey Mulli- 
gan and Philip Schayes each 
got one. Their second game 
will be played March 14 - 
12:30 at Morinville. 


GOODTIMERS 


Morinville Goodtimers 
certainly showed their visi- 
tors how to put on a hockey 
tournament; but they left the 
hockey playing demonstra- 
tion to the Public Trustees 
and the Westlock Magpies; 
who met in the final game 
Sunday at eight to determine 
the tournament winners. The 
Public Trustees emerged 
victorious (6-5) in a close, 
well played and entertaining 
hockey game. The winners of 
the consolation event were 
the Highways Dept. who 
edged Spruce Grove 5-4 in 
the six o'clock final. Mor- 
inville wearing the Seniors 
sweaters were too good for 
the B event (beating Bon 
Accord 13-2 in their first 
game) but not quite good 
enough for the main bout 
being eliminated 9-3 by the 
eventual winners (Public 
Trustees). Leo Lalonde, Al- 
lan Bentz and Paul Houle 
fashioned hat-tricks; Marcel 
Chalifoux got a pair while 
Rene Chevalier and Dave 
Pezer picked up singles the 
first game. Paul Houle and 
Al Bentz scored early in their 
second game to tie and move 
ahead of the Public Trustees 
in the first period; however 
the second ended 4-2 for the 
visitors. Jim Woods made 
the only Morinville reply to 
the five goal outburst of the 
Trustees for a final score of 
9-3. 

Other participating teams 
were Stony Plain, Legal and 
Bon Accord. The Goodtimers 
wish to thank all those who 
helped put on the tourna- 
ment and associated func- 
tions. A special thanks to 
Paul's Meat Market for help 
with the meats, Morinville 
Super A Foods for groceries, 
Morinville Bakery for buns, 
Frontier Daze Association for 
the hall, Guy Meunier and 
his band for providing the 
entertainment, Rollie and 
Betty Belanger for giving 
eggs and potatoes and those 
who worked the arena kit- 
chen. Trophies were donated 
by Paul's Confectionary, W. 
W. Farm Equipment, Len 
Gibeault (Esso agent) in 
Morinville, Macleod’s store 
and the big trophy will be 
suitably engraved and dis- 
played at Paul's Confec- 
tionary throughout the year. 
All proceeds of the tourna- 
ment and related functions 
are slated for donation to the 
Central Sturgeon Agricul- 
tural Society artificial ice 
fund. 


FARM EQUIPMENT LTD. 


BOX 448 ; 
MORINVILLE, ALBERTA. 


ME 


Massey Ferguson 


PHONE: 939-4325 


|PARTS - SALES - SERVICE 


the Royal Alexandra Hospi- 
tal, weighed 6 Ibs. 13 ozs. 
and is a first grandchild for 
both Mr. and Mrs. Bill 
Mikaluk of Morinville and 
Mr. and Mrs. Bert McGrath 
of Rocky Mountain House. 


On March 13, 1976, the 
Credit Union will be having 
their annual banquet and 
social from 6 p.m. till 1 a.m., 
at the Morinville Recreation 
Centre. (Music by the 
‘*Satellites’’.) Tickets are $3 
per person and are available 
from the Credit Union. 


The Skate-a-thon which 
was held on Heritage Lake on 
Sunday, March 7, was a huge 
success. Proceeds from this 
event go to the Ag. Society to 
help pay for artificial ice and 
pledges can be paid to Eva 
Quinn at Quinn’s Plumbing 
and Heating Ltd. The or- 
ganizers of this event would 
like to thank all those who 
participated and special th- 
anks to all those who gave 
their time and effort, to help 
make this event a success. 


The School Board would 
appreciate suggestions for a 
name for the new elementary 
school. To give everyone a 
chance to participate in 
naming the school, the Board 
decided to sponsor a contest. 
A $25 prize will be given to 
the winning entry. Please 
address your entries to: Mrs. 
Jean Beaupre, Secretary- 
Treasurer, Thibault R.C.P. 
School District #35, Morin- 
ville, Alberta. 


On February 1, 1976, Leon 
and Charlotte Riopel left for 
a holiday on Waiki Beach. 
After a very enjoyable time 
of meeting friends, studying 
the culture of the people, and 
travelling throughout the 
island, the couple returned 
home on February 29th. 


The Morinville Board of 


MORINVILLE MEMOS 


Trade are hosting the annual 
‘Meet Your Neighbour Ni- 
ght,’’ on March 27 at the 
Rec. Centre, music by the 
High Chaparrall and a mid- 
night supper. This event is to 
encourage the new residents 
to come to the social and get 
to meet your neighbours and 
the rest of the community. 
Everyone is welcome, new, 
and old residents of the town 
and district. Please get your 
tickets in advance from the 
business places or from the 
executive. Gerry Schindler, 
Dr. Paul Underwood, Eva 
Quinn, Lloyd Kachman, Bob 
Craig, Henry Lamoureux and 
Anne Kryskow. 


The plans for the new 
elementary 6 x 6 core school 
are presently in the hands of 
the Department of Educa- 
tion, School Buildings Br- 
anch for approval. After 
approval, the Board will be 
ready for tender, however 
the official registered land 
site is still required before 
any construction can begin. 
Indications are that they will 
have the registered plan at 
the end of March. 


Cliff and Flo McGinnis 
returned home recently from 
a two week moor trip in the 
U.S. They travelled as far 
south as Yuba City, Calif- 
ornia. Cliff was sick for four 
days, but in spite of this 
set-back, they had a really 
good time. Teresa was in 
good hands at the home of 
Anne and Ed Kryskow. 


The School Board met with 
representatives of the Alber- 
ta Housing Corporation to 
discuss the tentative plans 
for the construction of the 
new Senior Citizens complex 
on the Yellow School pro- 
perty. The Thibault Board 
indicated to the AHC re- 
presentatives that the price 
and time of the land turnover 
would be further discussed 


G & L ELECTRIC LTD. 


COMPLETE ELECTRICAL SERVICES 


PHONE: 939-4139 


MORINVILLE 


YOU CAN DEPEND ON YOUR. 


CREDIT UNION 
102% 
TERM DEPOSITS 


(82% 
BLUE CHIP SAVINGS 


LIFE INSURED SHARE SAVINGS 

LIFE AND DISABILITY INSURED LOANS 
AND MORTGAGE LOANS 

LOW COST CHEQUING ACCOUNTS 


CAISSE POPULAIRE DE 
MORINVILLE SAVINGS & CREDIT UNION LTD. 
MORINVILLE, ALBERTA. 


MAURICE PERRAS, MANAGER 


ED RAE -- ASSISTANT MANAGER 


| PHONE: 939-4120 


MORINVILLE 


after public notice is given to 
the ratepayers of the district. 


Get well wishes to Mar- 
shall Lalonde, at the Stur- 
geon General Hospital! Hope 
to see you back playing 
hockey soon - Marshall. 


Reader’s co-operation in 
telephoning or bringing in 
news items is much appre- 
ciated and as early in the 
week as possible. News 
items are completed Sunday 
evenings for delivery Mon- 
day to the Gazette. Please 
phone 939-4145 or stop in at 
9901 - 99 Avenue (directly 
behind the new Red Rooster 
store). 


The Central Sturgeon Ag. 
Society will be having a 
‘‘Name the Building’’ con- 


test in the near future. 
Anyone may propose a name 
but the name must conotate a 
multi-use structure. The 


name will be decided at the 


Sportsman Supper, April 16. 
TEEN DANCE 


The Senior Students’ Un- 
ion are proud to present 
‘*Patch,’’ a highly talented 
and one of the most popular 
bands in Alberta. Their 
growing popularity is partly 
due to their multi appear- 
ances at the most well known 
clubs and cabarets in Ed- 
monton. Their drawing cap- 
acity is tremendous so be 
sure and be there right at 
9:30 p.m. sharp at the 
Morinville Recreation Centre 
- Friday, March 12 for a good 
time. 


WEEKEND 


F ENTERTAINMENT 


| 
\ 


_— 


at the ALL NEW 


FRONTIERSMAN 
HOTEL 


MORINVILLE 
‘ For the Good Times’ 


MARCH 12 AND 13 - TOBACCO ROAD 


Four new 
John Deere 


‘Utility 
Tractors 


Come and See Us At 
THE MAYFIELD INN 


1:30 P.M. -- MARCH 11th 


Refreshments after Show 


See them 
perform at 
Farming Frontiers ’76 


Family styling that's inherited .. . family 
reputation that’s earned — that’s the 
keynote theme of four new John Deere 
under-80-hp tractors. You'll see them in 
operation on a wide variety of field 
assignments at our Farming Frontiers 
‘76 program — just one part of an exciting 
new filmed lineup of tractors and 
equipment. Make your plans now to join 
your friends at Farming Frontiers '76. 


i 
MARTIN FARM 
EQUIPMENT LTD. 


11530 - 154 STREET, EDMONTON 


Phone 452-2790 
or southside 434-8525 


ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1976 - 25 


By Connie Maurier 
Congratulations to Ray- 
mond and Julie Hills on 
arrival of a baby girl. Tammy 
was born at the St. Albert 
Sturgeon General Hospital 
on March 4th, weighing 7 
Ibs. 4 ozs. 


Omer and Stella Pelletier, 
along with Rock and Janet 
Prouxl are just back froma 


32 day holiday. They flew to 
Toronto, Barbados and Flor- 
ida, The Pelletiers’ enjoyed 
beautiful weather throughout 
their trip and had the oppor- 
tunity to visit the Maple Leaf 
Gardens and the Metro 
System while in Toronto. 


Sympathies are extended 
to Mrs. Celine Prouxl and 
family in the loss of their 


JOB 
OPPORTUNITY 


The Legal Recreation Board requires a Secretary- 
treasurer. The applicant must be a resident of the Town 
of Legal and must state the qualifications and salary 
desired. Please apply to Legal Recreation Board by 
letter in care of Mr. Omer Pelletier. Applications will be 


accepted until March 24th. 


STURGEON SCHOOL 
DIVISION NO. 24 


ANNUAL MEETING 


The Annual Meeting of the Sturgeon School Division 
will be held in the NAMAO SCHOOL. 


MONDAY, MARCH 22, 1976 
7:30 P.M. 


Rotella: the oil that’s 
priced right! 


Charles E. Krauskopf 
Secretary-Treasurer. 


Here’s what Shell 
filters can do! 


loving husband and father. 
Mr. Elai Proux! died sudd- 
enly on March 4 and was 
buried in Legal, March 8. A 
large crowd attended the 
services and shared a lunch- 
eon served at the Community 
Hall. 


On March 27 at the 
Community Hall there will be 
an ‘‘Appreciation Night’’ 
when everyone is welcomed 
to show their appreciation to 
our hockey players and all 
those who gave their time 
and work towards the arena. 
The doors will open at 8.p.m. 
Refreshments will be served 
and the dance will feature 
Danny Mahe’s band. There 
is a small fee of $2.50 per 
person asked and there will 
be a lunch served later in the 
evening. Everyone is wel- 
comed. 


Mr. and Mrs. Allan Keane 
motored to Saskatoon last 
week to attend the Federated 
Co-op annual meeting. They 
report that the meeting was 
both lively and fruitful. They 
enjoyed reneweing old ac- 
quaintances and meeting 
new friends. 


SENIORS REPORT ON 
NEW HORIZONS TOUR 
TO HAWAII 


Recently returned from a 
funfilled two week holiday in 
Hawaii are Mr. and Mrs. 
George Montpetit, Mr. and 
Mrs. W. Labelle, Mr. and 
Mrs. W. Lecavalier, Mr. and 
Mrs. Art Morin, Mrs. V. 
Parent, Mrs. L. Lamarche, 
Mr. and Mrs. Albert DeCh- 
amplain, Mr. and Mrs. 
Lucien Cyr, Mr. and Mrs. R. 
Bergevin and Mr. and Mrs. 
Henry Montpetit. Previous to 
their departure, the group 
spent a delightful and infor- 
mative evening at Fort 
Saskatchewan at the invita- 
tion of Club SO and Fort 


Travel Service. Here they 


met their group leaders, Mr. 
and Mrs. Eric Young and 


Shell Rotella* is a heavy- 
duty (MIL-L-2104B) truck 
and tractor oil. It’s the 
inexpensive motor oil you 
need for older model 
equipment. 

Although the price is 
attractive, Rotella is a good 
quality motor oil from fine 
base oil stock. It is specifi- 
cally recommended for De- 
troit Diesel engines. 

For your newer equip- 
ment, we have Shell motor 
oils that will meet or exceed 
the warranty standards of 
virtually any piece of 
equipment. Ask us for 
details. 


Bonus Certificate 


We will give you a Bonus 
Certificate, which can be 
redeemed on Shell Auto- 
motive Tractor Accessories, 
valued at 10% of your Shell 
lubricants order. Minimum 
order is 90 gallons or 900 
Ibs. Orders must be deliv- 
ered within 30 days. 

You get an extra 3% if 
you pay cash. 


Example: 


gallon. 


*Reg.’d Trademark 


26 - ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 


regularly to get the longest 


That's a Bonus Certifi- 
cate worth 13% of your 
lubricant order!* 


You purchase a 45 gallon 
drum of a lubricant at a cost 
of $2.50 per gallon, and a 
4S gallon drum of another 
lubricant at @ cost of $2.75 a 


Your A.T.A. bonus cer- 
tificate, based on a possible 


*This certificate redeemavle only at place where lubricant purchased. 


SHELL FARM SUPPLY 


13135 ST. ALBERT TRAIL 
PHONE: 454-1212 AND 454-7666 


We have a full range of 
Shell air and oil filters to 
keep your equipment run- 
ning efficiently this spring. 

Remember, a dirty air 
filler can cut mileage ina 
car by one mile per gallon. 
Think what it could do on 
equipment exposed to dus- 
ty conditions and running 
12 hours a day! 

A new oil filter will help 
reduce engine wear. Re- 
member, it’s important to 
change oil and filters 


life out of your investment. 


10%, is $23.63. Or, based 
on a possible 13% (taking 
into account that extra 3% 
for cash), is $30.71. 

That's almost like getting 
a gift of a battery, plugs 
and filters with your lubri- 
cant order! 


Order now! This 
deal ends April 30th. 


© 


BECAUSE... 


Company. 
CONTACT: 


7) 


76 


LEGAL LOCALS 


received their tickets, flight 
bags and other valuable 
information for their New 
Horizons tour. 

The group travelled by 
chartered bus to the In- 
ternational Airport where 
they boarded an Air Canada 
DC8. Arriving in Honolulu, 
they were greeted with the 
traditional ‘‘Aloha’’ welcome 
with leis, luncheon, Haw- 
aiian entertainment, and a 
mini tour of Waikiki. Other 
highlights of their trip 
included a trip around the 
Island of Oahu through the 
pineapple and sugar cane 
fields, a morning at the 
Kodak Show, a visit to 
Paradise Park, a cruise 
around Pearl Harbor, visits 
to the zoo and to Sea Life 
Park. A most rewarding trip 
was one by chartered bus to 
the Polynesian Cultural Cen- 
tre. 

One evening a surprise 
wedding anniversary party in 
honour of Mr. and Mrs. W. 
Lecavalier was held in their 
room in the Outrigger Surf 
Hotel. On Sunday several 
members of the group 
phoned to Legal for news of 
their families, but Mr. and 
Mrs. Morin were the most 
surprised - they had two new 
baby grand-daughters! Thu- 
rsday, four Legal men and 
two from St. Albert chartered 
a boat for deep sea fishing. 
George Montpetit and Mr. 
Gamache were successful in 
bringing in two large mah- 
imahi (dolphin fish). That 
day was really enjoyed by the 
six men and will be long 
remembered by all of them. 

Thanks of the Legal group 
go to George who was really 
their organizer and who is 
always a real good sport. 
These travellers from Legal 
are deeply grateful to Grace 
and Eric Young for inviting 
them to join them on this 
tour, and also wish to thank 
them for their constant 
charm and kindness thr- 
oughout the holiday. 

Whether or not any of 


| CANBRA FOODS 


Box 99 
LETHBRIDGE 


Phone 327578] 


For the past sixteen years, hundreds of rapeseed growers have 
been contracting with Canbra Foods on 


They are assured of a market for their entire crop. 

They can price immediately their cropisin the bin, or... 
They can defer pricing until July 31st, 1977. 

They can get interest-free cash advances on delivered seed 
They can purchase quality seed and Treflan on credit. 
They get full-time field advice from seeding to harvest 

They can deliver to local Canbra : 
no-cost pickup on the farm. 

They can share in any patrona 


Maurice Regimbald, Westlock 
Phone: 342-4079 


Or write or phone Canbra Foods Ltd., Lethbridge, Alberta 


a continuous basis 


gathering points or arrange 


ge refund declared by the 


these people ever return to 
beautiful Hawaii, they agree 
that the trip has left them 
many fond memories, has 
deepened their appreciation 
of the many cultures of the 
people of the Pacific islands, 
and has made them realize 
that, as usual, there is no 
place like ‘‘home, sweet 
home.”’ 


BONSPIEL RESULTS 


Grand Challenge winners 
in the Legal closed bonspiel 
were the Joe Gill rink with 
Johnny Marchak at 3rd, John 
Gill playing second and 
George Zadunayski at lead. 
Runners-up were the Remi 
Bolle foursome with Fred 
Zilinski and Dan Montpetit in 
3rd and 4th place. 

The second event was won 


by Camille Bolle’s rink, with 
J. P. Letourneau, Pat Keane 
and Shirley Derrien taking 
the other prizes. Ray Rivard 
took the third event, followed 
by Don Hills, Ed Royan and 
Jack St. Martin, 

In the fourth event the Ray 
Brisson team placed first, 
followed by Martha St. 
Martin, Carmen St. Jean and 
Oliver Laframboise. 

The Legal Curling Club is 
grateful to the local busin- 
essmen for generous dona- 
tions to the event and to 
those who worked to make 
the ‘spiel a great success. 
The club is also looking 
forward to seeing everyone 
at their annual supper and 
dance on March 20. Tickets 
are available from all Board 
members. 


Leonard Blanchette presented a 10-year service plaque to 
Theodore Zilinski, president of the Board of Directors of 


Legal Savings and Credit Union at the annual meeting. 


Pesticide applicator 


course 


The 1976 Pesticide appli- 
calor’s training course will 
be held at Olds College 
March 15 - 27. 

Deadline for registrations 


is March 1, 

The first week March 15 to 
20 will consist of practical 
studies in the areas of in- 
sects, plants, plant diseases, 
application equipment, che- 
mical selection, formulations 
calibration and safety equip- 
ment. 

The second week, March 
22-27 is a series of special 
days which will be offered on 
an individual basis. 

More details on the course 
content can be obtained from 
the registrar, Olds College, 
Olds, Alberta. 


A HeTay 4agit 10 GET NE 


R. BENTZ 
MOTORS LTD. 


PHONE: 398-3696 
BOX 720 

THORHILD, ALTA. 
Massey Fergusor 

LOCATED AT THE 


CROSSROADS IN 
THORHILD 


FORMERLY 
J & JMOTORS LTD. 


By Norma Crozier 


NAMAO SNOWMOBILE 
GYMKHANA 


Another successful snow- 
mobile gymkhana was held 
at Namao on March 7 and the 
results were: 

Barrel Racing: ist Art 
Low; 2nd Gary Gauthier; 3rd 
John Gibson, 


Pole Bending: 1st John 
Gibson; 2nd Derek Neilsen; 
3rd Gary Gauthier. 

Stake Race: Ist Art Low; 
2nd John Gibson; 3rd Murr- 
ay Chase. 

Flag Picking: 1st Art Low; 
2nd John Gibson; 3rd Derek 
Neilsen. 

LeMans: Mens - Ist John 
Gibson; 2nd Wayne Potter; 
3rd Derek Neilsen. 


Keyhole Race: ist Murray 
Chase; 2nd Derek Neilsen; 
3rd Richard Bokenfohr. 

Cross Country 440 Ma- 
chines: ist Art Low; 2nd 
John Alleman; 3rd Wayne 
Potter. 

Cross Country 340 Mach- 
ines: Ist John Gibson; 2nd 
Murray Chase; 3rd Derek 
Neilsen. 

Total High Points: ist 
John Gibson - 26 points; 2nd 


NAMAO NEWS 


Art Low - 24 points, 3rd 
Derek Neilsen - 20 points. 


Mr. and Mrs. Donald 
Cameron and Mr. and Mrs. 
Harold Paul have returned 
from a month long bus tour 
to Florida and the Bahamas. 
The highlight of their trip 
was the Mardi Gras in New 
Orleans. 


Get well wishes this week 


Gibbons Cubs enjoy camp 


The 1st Gibbons Cubs held 
their winter camp, February 
26, 27 and 28 at the Coronado 
Church. The weather was 
fine for the boys to hold sled 
races,skidoo rides, broom- 
ball and hockey plus indoor 
activities of working on camp 
badges and camp crafts. 
Songs and skits were put on 
by both boys and leaders. It 
was hoped that all 23 boys 
enjoyed the camp. The 
weary-eyed leaders were 
Maurice Billsburrow, Harry 
Walmsley, Wayne Reap and 
Ron Ponech. Thanks also 
goes to Betty-Ann Bilsbor- 
row, Ellen Drachmann, Na- 
omi Ponech and Colleen 


By Karen Hogg 


The Ist Gibbons Guide 


Nault for their selection and 


work on crafts. Thank you 


Edward Croft, Elmer Die- © 
wert and Albert Steinwand © 
for bringing out your skidoos ~ 


on Saturday. With contin- 
uing help from parents on 
cub activities the cubs will go 
far this year. 


‘Do Your Best’’ - the 


motto of the cub-scouting’s | 


y 


program for boys of cub age. 
This is the way he tackles 
everything in his program, 
whether its going places, 
doing things, or having fun. 
They need all the support 
that you can give. Come on, 
why not ‘‘Do your Best.”’ 


Company and the Ist and 
2nd Gibbons Brownie Packs 
held their annual mother and 


HORSE HILL NEWS 


By Peggy Wenzel 
Mr. Ken McAmmond, 
senior health inspector for 
the Sturgeon Health Unit will 
attend the March 22 meeting 
of the Horse Hill Community 
League for a discussion on 
health rules and regulations 
when serving food to the 
public. He will be showing a 
film as part of the pre- 
sentation and everybody is 
welcome to attend. 
Following Mr. McAmm- 
ond’s talk the regular meet- 
ing of the league will 
proceed. 


A Spring Thaw dance has 
been arranged for Saturday, 
March 27, when the Kandy 
Kanes will provide the 
music. The evening includes 
a smorgasbord, and tickets at 
$12 per couple are available 
from Dave Zaychuk (973- 
6440), Floyd Cruden (973- 
5792), Joe’s Store (973-5757) 
or Evergreen Store (973- 
5060). The action gets un- 
derway at 8 p.m., and this 
should be a real fun evening. 

Those interested in learn- 
ing how to make mukluks 
and other soft leather articles 
are reminded of the two-day 
workshop arranged for Mar- 
ch 24 and 25 at the commun- 
ity-use area of Horse Hill 
school. The fee of $5.50 


covers the cost of materials 
and those planning to attend 
are asked to bring their own 
lunch. Coffee will be pro- 
vided. The workshop goes 
from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., 
each day and further in- 
formation is available from 
Peggy Wenzel at 973-5783. 

Both men and women are 
invited to take the decorating 
course in wall coverings and 
paints being given on three 
consecutive Tuesday even- 
ings: March 16, 23 and 30. 
Single registration is $3 and 
for a couple $4. Register by 
phoning Leslie Steel at 
973-5927. 


HELP NEEDED FOR 
BALL SEASON 


The Sports Committee is 
looking for coaches for both 
boys and girls ball teams and 
umpires are needed as well. 
Anyone willing to help out in 
either of these areas is asked 
to get in touch with Bill 
Mullen at 973-5713 and vol- 
unteers will be greatly 
appreciated by those trying 
to ensure a good season for 
the young people. District 
residents who still have ball 
uniforms at home are asked 
to send them to the school 
right away. 


FOR ALL YOUR PLUMBING, HEATING AND GAS 


QUINN’S PLUMBING & 
HEATING LTD. 


INSTALLATIONS AND SERVICE 


MORINVILLE 


939-4217 


. [AFTER HOURS . . . 939-4091] 
“WE SELL THE BEST AND SERVICE THE REST” 


A. ae * 


Nelson Diewert, youngest member of the 1st Gibbons Cub 
Pack was given the honour of cutting the Winter Camp cake 
held at Coronado Church facilities in late February. 


Gibbons Guides hold banquet 


daughter banquet on Feb- 
ruary 25 at the Gibbons 
Community Hall. Head-table 
guests were Mrs. Evelyn 
Fraser, Tamarac Area camp 
advisor, Mrs. Helen Lesy- 
shyn, Kanata division com- 
missioner and Mrs. Doreen 
Lamoureux, Gibbons district 
commissioner. Master of 
ceremonies was guider Lynn 
Morin who called upon Irene 
Hofs to give the toast to the 
Queen. Following the supper 
the toast to the guiders was 
given by Shelly Diewert. The 
toast to the mothers was 
given by Tanya Smith and 
Mrs. Smith responded with a 
toast to the daughters. Mrs. 
Evelyn Fraser, who has 
presented her daughters 
with badges and awards had 
the pleasure of presenting 
her grand-daughter, Lynn 
Morin with the second 
highest award in guides, the 
All Around Cord. Lynn’s 
aunt, Mrs. Pat Briggs pre- 
sented her with the All 


Around Pen. The entertain- 
ment began with everyone 
sitting around the campfire 
circle. 

The 1st Brownie Pack put 
on skits of what a Brownie 
meeting would be like on the 
moon. 

Displays on different 
countries were done by the 
guides who were working on 
the Wofld Trefoil Badges. 
The guides had speeches 
about the different countries 
their patrols did displays of. 

The 2nd Brownie Pack did 
puppet shows. The Brownies 


made all of their own 
puppets. 
Campfire was led by Sandy 


Archer and Debbie Williams 
who are packies for the two 
brownie packs. A special 
thanks to all the mothers who 
worked so hard to put ona 
wonderful meal. And also a 
big thanks to the fathers of 
the girls who served the meal 
and did dishes and the 
cleaning up! 


USED TRACTORS 


MM SSTAR W/LDR. 
CASE 500 DIE. 


DAVID BROWN 990DIE W/3 PT. 

CASE 830 CASE-0-MATIC 

IHC 826 W/CAB & DUALS HYDRO 
CASE 1030 DIESEL, CAB 

JOHN DEERE 7020 - 4 WHEEL DRIVE 
MINNEAPOLIS ‘‘U’? GAS TRACTOR 
CASE 2670, 4.W.D. CAB, AIR, & DUALS 


CASE 970 DIESEL CAB, 3 PT. HITCH 
CASE 830 W/CAB - LOADER. 


FORD NAA WITH MOUNTED BLADE & PLOW 
IHC 460 DIE POW. ST. 
FORD 5000 DIE W/LDR. & 3 PT. 


WE RENT — LEASE — TRADE 


CASE POWER & fer-[-J-] 
EQUIPMENT LTD 


12011-111 Ave., Edmonton 
PH. 452-3080 


to Mrs. Audrey Jefferey who 
is convalescing at home and 
to Mr. Ken Stanton who 
suffered a heart attack while 
holidaying in Phoenix, Ariz- 
ona. May they both enjoy 
good health again soon. 


A reminder - Blood Donor 
Clinic at Bon Accord on 


WESTERN CANADA 
SCHOOL OF 
AUCTIONEERING LTD. 


Canada’s first, and the only 
completely Canadian cour- 
se offered anywhere. Lic- 


ensed under the Trade 
Schools Licensing Act, 
r.s.a. 1970, C.366. For 
particulars of the next 
course write: BOX 687, 
LACOMBE, ALBERTA OR 
PHONE 782-6215. 


March 16 from 6 - 9 p.m. 
Paper Bin will be at Namao 


on March 31 from 9 a.m. - 9 
p.m. 


Massey Ferguson 


INDUSTRIES LTD. 
5735 - 103 St., Edmonton 
PHONE: 435-4815 


FARMS 


NEEDED NOW 
AND ACREAGES 


We have immediate buyers that want to purchase a 
farm - any size or type. Please contact us for prompt 


and fast service. 


465-0004 -- T. McGUIRE -- 454-7422 
SULLIVAN REALTY CO. LTD. 
202, 10435 - 124 STREET, EDMONTON. 


NAN’S 
BETTER MEATS 


GIBBONS, ALTA. 
Ph. 923-2293 


CANADA A-1 OR A-2 SIDES OF BEEF 


200 LBS. AVERAGE 


HINDS OF BEEF [100 LBS.[ ..............004+ 99¢ 


FRONTS OF BEEF [100 LBS.) ................ 59¢ 


SIDES OF PORK 


[INCLUDES HAM, BACON AND LARD] 


WEEKLY DELIVERY EDMONTON & FORT SASK. 


DISTRIBUTORS LTD. 


FIRST IN 


-SERVICE 


-QUALITY PRODUCTS 
-FRIENDLINESS 


ESSO BALE LOK 
BALER TWINE 


ANHYDROUS AMMONIA 


IMPERIAL OIL 
PETROLEUM PRODUCTS 


GRAIN, FEED & 
GENERAL HAULING 


IMPERIAL OIL AGENTS 


ST. ALBERT 


458-2156 459-7590 


LEGAL 
961-3970 


ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1976 - 27 


By Karen Hogg 

The Gibbons Medical Cli- 
nic is pleased to announce 
the new office location next 
door to the old post office. 
The building has been fully 
renovated, new windows, 


\a— ] P 
Cau 


16738 - 111 AVENUE 


IF IT ISN’T 


Realty Limited 


YOUR 
“‘QUALIFIED REALTORS” 


selling. 


This sturdy outdoor ther- 
mometer makes it easy to 
convert from Celsius to 
Fahrenheit at a glance. 
Comes with manufacturer’s 
warranty. 

Quality at a competitive 
price. That’s what your 
Shell Agent offers you in 
lubricants for heavy equip- 
ment, too. 

Shell have lubricants 
which meet or exceed the 


arts - Sales 
Service 

White Farm Equipment 
Cockshutt, Oliver & Minneapolis 


see 
Sketcher & Turner Farm Equip 


Is YOUR Body in SHAPE? 
BUTT’S 


AUTO BODY SHOP 


IN MORINVILLE ARE THE 


McGINNIS REALTY LIMITED is pleased to introduce 
their new salesman ART CHALIFOUX. 


Art has completed the Edmonton Real Estate Board 
salesman’s course and as a new M.L.S. member would 
like to invite old and new acquaintances to call on him 
for all their Real Estate needs, whether buying or 


939-4435 or 939-4248 MORINVILLE 
939-4119 - RESIDENCE 


Offset bracket for easy reading 
Sturdy rust proof metal construction 
Made by Taylor, so it's one of the best 
Can be mounted left or right side 
Bold, black easy-to-read lettering 


Red coloured liquid won't fade 


Outdoor 
Thermometer 


$1.89 


with Shell lubricants 
purchase of $5 or more. 
*Plus Provincial Sales Tax where applicable 


wood panelling, repainted 
and all ready for patients. 
You would never know it was 
the same building on the 
inside. The Clinic is open 
four days a week, Monday, 
Tuesday, Wednesday and 


PHONE: 489-3117 


PEOPLE TO SEE FOR 


warranty requirements of 
virtually all major heavy 
equipment manufacturers. 
You can trust them to help 
protect your investment in 
equipment. 

Quality at competitive 
prices. That’s how your 
Shell Agent helps give you 
good value for your dollar. 
See him soon and get your 
outdoor thermometer. 


Friday from 12 to 4. The 
telephone number is 9232200 
and in case of an emergency 
call 735-3931. 


A reminder of the teen 
dance to be held on Satur- 
day, March 13 in the school 
gym. Refreshments will be 
served. Advance tickets are 
$2.50 or $3 at the door. 
Tickets may be purchased 
from Beth Morin, Julie Spra- 
gue, Don Mabbutt or any 
other teen club member. Age 
limit is 13 to 18 years and the 
band will be ‘‘Andromeda.”’ 


The 1st Gibbons Cubs and 
Scouts would like to thank 
Mrs. Susan Miller for all her 
help at their annual banquet 
which was held two weeks 
ago. 


A tea and bake sale will be 
sponsored by the Boy Scouts 
Saturday, March 13 from 2 to 
5 in the hall. Included will be 
a White Elephant sale, small 
raffle, jelly bean guess, door 
prize and games. Admission 
is 75 cents for adults and 25 
cents for children. All baking 
donations would be appre- 
ciated. 


Ray and Marilyn Foster 
are proud to announce the 
birth of their first child, a 
baby girl, Susan Rae on 
February 19 weighing in at 7 
Ibs. 3 ozs. 


Louis and Dian Elzinga are. 
pleased to announce the 
birth of'a baby boy, Kurt 
Westerbaan on Feb. 29 
weighing in at 6 Ibs. 3 ozs. A 
brother for Janice and Kent. 
Little Kurt is also a leap-year 
baby. 


Gerry and Tracy Boisjoli 
had their daughter Daune 
Jolene christened on Sunday, 

,March 7 at the Gibbons 
Anglican Church. Godpar- 
ents for littke Daune are 
Uncle Glen, Tracy’s brother, 
Aunt Judy, Gerry’s sister, 
and Mrs. Dana Boschansky, 
a very good friend to Gerry 
and Tracy. 


Billy and Linda McEwen 
and Ron and Laura Mc- 
Donald left for a two week 
vacation in Hawaii on Friday, 
March 5. The suntanned 
quartet will be back on 
March 20. 


The Robert (Bob) Stirton 
Memorial Trophy Case is 
now on display in the 
Gibbons Arena. Thanks ag- 
ain to‘his many friends who 
donated so generously. This 
case is for all the trophies 


SALES & 


S.P. Combine with Cab, 


Disc. 


MORINVILLE 


Ph. 939-4114 
MORINVILLE 


For the best in 1976 
1 COCKSHUTT Model 555 


Strawchopper and Pickup. 
1 COCKSHUTT 16’ Double 


GIBBONS NEWS 


which have been awarded to 
sports teams in the Gibbons 
area. 


HOCKEY NEWS & SCORES 


On March 6, the mites 
held a hockey tournament. 
Teams entered were from 
Steele Heights, Riviere Qui 
Barre, St. Edmunds and 
Gibbons. 

Scores for the games were 
as follows: Gibbons vs Steele 
Heights 2-2; Riviere Qui 
Barre 1 vs St. Edmunds 4; 
Gibbons vs St. Edmunds, 
2-2; Steele Heights 1 vs ROB 
- 0; ROB 3 vs Gibbons 1; St. 
Edmunds 5 vs Steele Heights 
- 0. 

The winner of the tourna- 
ment was St. Edmunds, who 
received a trophy for the 
winning team and also for 
the highest scores. Trophies 
were donated by John 
Vanderspool Construction. 

The peewees had playoff 
games on March 8 against 
Redwater. The score was 8-1. 

Feb. 29 - Gibbons 7 vs 
Legal 2; March 2 - Thorhild 1 
vs Gibbons 10. 

Shavers: March 3 - Gibb- 
ons A’s 10 vs Bon Accord 2; 

Gibbons Indians: March 3 
-.Gibbons vs Bon Accord - 
tied two all; March 4 - 
Gibbons 15 ys Parkway 
Country 6; Gibbons 6 vs UFA 
Co-op 3. 


Anyone able to work at the 
concession in the arena on 
weekends are asked to call 
Eileen Pelletier at 923-2440 
or get in touch with her down 
at the concession. Your help 
is also needed during Snow- 
ball Days. Anyone able to 
work please get in touch with 
Eileen. 


A big thank you is sent to 
Pepsi Cola for donating the 
time clock in the arena. It 
sure makes a difference 
when you know what period, 
how much time is left and 
what the score is. People who 
arrive late for a game can see 
exactly what is going on. 


BROWNIE WINTER CAMP 


The girls in Gibbons 
Brownie pack would like to 
thank leaders Mrs. Doreen 
Minchau, Mrs. Betty Hoff, 
Mrs. Veronica Cherniwchan, 
Mrs. Vicki Gordichuk, Sandy 
Archer and Debbie Williams 
for a wonderful Winter 
Camp. 

The girls worked on the 
requirements for their snow 
shoe badges and_ their 
compass badges. They also 
were involved with cooking, 


SERVICE 


1 COCKSHUTT Model 
1600 Diesel Tractor with 
Hydraulic and LPTO. 

1 J.D. Model 720 gas 


Tractor with hydraulic 
LPTO. 


washing and clean-up and 
felt they had a great group of 
leaders, ‘‘even though we 
raised their hair a few 
times.”’ 

On the Saturday after- 


noon, March 6, they had the 


pleasure of a visit from Mrs. 
Alpha Parham, district camp 
adviser, who skated with the 
girls and she also brought 
along two friends, one of 
whom is the district comm- 
issioner from Smoky Lake, 
known affectionately as 
**Woody.”’ 


The girls are also grateful 
for the excellent facilities 
provided by the Coronado 
United Church and the 
Coronado Community Lea- 
gue. 

Mrs. Cherniwchan was the 
adviser on camp crafts and 
her work was much appre- 
ciated. 

On Sunday the Brownies 
attended church and Sunday 
School. They felt the camp 
was a great success and 
thank all who helped make it 
possible. 


Dr. and Mrs. E. Benjamin Toanes’ marriage took place on 
December 26, 1975, at the Chapel of Our Lady the 
Redemptrix, Saint Mary’s University, San Antonio, Texas. 
Kathryn is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth James 
Carey of San Antonio, and Ben is the youngest son of Mr. 
and Mrs. Earl Toane, Gibbons, Alberta. They are presently 
living in Spirit River, Alberta, where Ben is associated with 


the Central Peace Clinic. 


Vimy Needles News 


By Lucy de Champlain 

On February 27, the mem- 
bers of the Vimy Needles 
Club, gathered for their final 
speak-offs. Juniors came 
with a prepared speech 
lasting three to five minutes 
and the seniors - 4-6 
minutes, 

As a first on the program, 
Mrs. Bilodeau welcomed 
everyone and then proceeded 
with the introductions: Jud- 
ges - Mr. Dale Dowswell, 
Mr. Park Letts, Mrs. Freda 
McConaghy; Timekeepers - 
Mrs. Maxine Bernard, Mrs. 
Gloria Dubois; Tellers - Mrs. 
Marie-Louise Fortier, Mr. 
Fern Bilodeau; Ms. of Cere- 
monies - Celine Dubois, 
Adele Sequin. 

After the juniors presented 
their prepared speeches, an 
impromptu titled ‘*Break- 


fast"’ was said by all. 
Following a short intermiss- 
ion the seniors proceeded 
with their prepared spee- 
ches. The impromptu title 
chosen was ‘‘Doorlock.”’ 
This was enjoyed by all. 

While the tellers added up 
the points from ail judges, a 
delicious lunch prepared by 
our mothers was served. 

The tellers then came back 
and the judges gave general 
comments on the speakers. 
The winners were: Juniors: 
Ist - Suzanne Bilodeau, 
Speech: A Rewarding Ex- 
perience; 2nd - Gisele Huot, 
Speech: My Horse Silver. 

Seniors: Ist - Lucy de 
Champlain, Speech: The 
Right to Die; 2nd - Francoise 
Lusson, Speech: Why Fear 
the Unknown. 


NOTICE 
OF ANNUAL MEETING 


PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given that a Meeting of 
the Electors of the VILLAGE OF BON ACCORD will be 


held in the HALL on MONDAY, the 29th day of 


MARCH, 1976, at 8 o’clock p.m., for the discussion of 
Municipal affairs for the year ending December 
thirty-first, 1975, 


Dated at Bon Accord this 27th day of January, 1976. 


1 IHC Model B414 Tractor 
with Loader. 


1 J.D. 22’ Double Disc. 


SHELL FARM 


SUPPLY wi Siti ea 


New & Used Grain Augers 


JEAN CHUBB 


Drop in and see us! SECRETARY-TREASURER. 


28 - ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1976. se! 


By Sadie Allen 16 from 6-9 p.m. A gift of 

A reminder -- a Blood 
Donor Clinic will be held in 
the Bon Accord Community 
Centre on Tuesday, March 


blood is a gift of life. Please 
give yours. 


A miscellaneous shower in 


MORINVILLE AUCTION MART 


REGULAR SALES EVERY WEDNESDAY AT 
MORINVILLE AUCTION MART 


MISCELLANEOUS 11:00 a.m. LIVESTOCK 1:30 p.m. 


AUCTIONEER -- CHARLIE McLAUGHLIN 
LIC. #010177 


RESIDENCE: 973-5916 


PHONE: 939-4459 


 CALAHOO REPAIRS 
& SERVICE 


BEAT INFLATION - Out of town Repairs and Welding 
Farm Automotives and Heavy Duty 
ANYTHING BUT THE KITCHEN SINK 


20 MILES WEST OF ST. ALBERT 
ASK FOR ED OR ROGER 
FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE: 459-3034 


OPEN 
HOUSE 


Upen House will be held in NAMAO COMMUNITY 
HALL on SUNDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 21, from 2 
TILL 5 p.m., to honour Mr. and Mrs. George Horricks 
on the occasion of their 50th wedding anniversary. No 
gifts please. 


CALAHOO 
MEAT PROCESSING 


SPECIALIZING IN 
*FREEZER ORDERS 
*CUSTOM CUTTING 
*CURING AND SAUSAGE MAKING 


WILL CUT AND WRAP WILD GAME 
PHONE: 458-2136 
R.R. 1 CALAHOO 


FOR SALE 
BY TENDER 


THIBAULT CATHOLIC PUBLIC 
SCHOOL DISTRICT NO. 35 


Block A, Plan 7732 R, approximately 1.8 acres, 
(Morinville), Land and school (Yellow School), 4900 
square feet. 


All offers are subject to a five (5) year lease to the 
Thibault Catholic Public School District No. 3S. 


Offers will be received by the undersigned up to 2 
o'clock in the afternoon of the 29th day of March, A.D. 
1976, for the purchase of the above property. 


Tenders should be forwarded in a sealed envelope and 
marked ‘‘Tender - Yellow School.”’ 


The highest or any tender not necessarily accepted. 


JEAN BEAUPRE 
SECRETARY-TREASURER 
Thibault Catholic Public School District No. 35 
MORINVILLE* ALBERTA. TOG 1P0 


honour of Mrs. Barbara (nee 
Lewis) Collier will be held in 
the Bon Accord United 
Church at 8 p.m., on 
Monday, March 15. Lunch 


y will be provided. 


The Gibbons Medical Cli- 
nic with Drs. Sharma and 
Covenden have moved into a 
new office next to the old 
Post Office in Gibbons. The 
clinic is open Monday, Tues- 
day, Wednesday and Friday 
from 12 - 4. Appointments 
may be made by calling 
923-2200. For emergencies 
call 735-3931. 


A bake shoot sponsored by 
the #524 Cadet Squad will be 
held in the Bon Accord 
Community Centre on March 
14 from 1 - 5. Price per shoot 
is 35 cents. 


A reminder -- The Brown- 
ies and Guides will be 
holding their Spring Tea in 
the Bon Accord Community 
Centre on Saturday after- 
noon March 13. The tea will 
feature a White Elephant 
table’ and sale of crafts and 
home baking. 


Hockey fans were able to 
enjoy an encounter between 
the Wildcats and the Outlaws 
on Friday night. On Satur- 
day, we had the opportunity 
to see the ladies in action in 
the first game of a two-game 
total point series for a 
Challenge trophy. The Bon 
Accord Reo-ettes won by a 
3-1 score and downed the 
CFB team again on Sunday 
evening by a 6-5 score, cap- 
turing the trophy held by the 
CFB team for the past two 
seasons. The girls will be 
playing in the CFB annual 
Ladies Hockey Tournament 
this weekend. The tourna- 
ment will involve six teams 
and our girls will be playing 
their first game at 8 a.m., on 
Saturday, March 13. 


Congratulations to skip 
Bob Putnam and members of 
his rink, Orville Wyman, 
Peter Bilecki and Gary 
Bilecki (first time out for 
Gary) for winning the trophy 
in a bonspiel sponsored by 
the Gibbons and Bon Accord 
Friday-niters at Redwater on 
March 6. Organizor of the 


spiel was Earl Yeo of 
Gibbons. 
4H CLUBS ACTIVE 


The 4H Food Club held 
their 10th meeting on Feb. 
17. The meeting was opened 


BON ACCORD NEWS 


by O’Canada anf the pledge, 
led by Connie Kreway and 
Kim Boyd. Roll call was 
answered by ‘‘my favorite ice 
cream.’’ Next meeting the 
roll call will be ‘‘food we hate 
most.’’ ‘‘How to unmold 
jello’’ was demonstrated by 
Stacey Antoniuk and Marie 
Cousins. A cook-out was held 
on Feb. 14 at Mrs. Kushak’s. 
Members roasted wieners 
and made S-Mores. Mem- 
bers were asked to bring $2 
for bowling on March 7. 
Guest speaker Janice Cramer 
spoke on public speaking. 
Members then formed gr- 
oups with group 1 making 
Wieners and Beans, Gr. 2, 
macaroni; Gr. 3 pork chops 
and coleslaw and Gr. 4 buns. 
The club met for the 11th 
meeting on March 2. It will 
soon be the end of 4H for this 
season, The meeting opened 
with O’Canada and the 
pledge led by Karen Bjerke 
and Stacey Antoniuk. A 
discussion of public speak- 
ing, coming up on March 15 
and 16 in the Bon Accord 
Community Centre, was hel- 
d. Cindy Danake and Joyce 
Rockwell gave a demonstra- 
tion on ‘‘setting the table.’’ 
That time there was no 
clean-up as the water at 
Kowalski’s was fot working. 
This left group 2 with a very 
hot mouth because their 
project was Chili Con Carne. 
Group 1 made hamburgers, 
Gr. 3, chicken and Gr. 4, 
cinnamon buns. This report 
was submitted by club 
reporter, Shannon Tighe. 


The Bon Accord 4H Beef 
Club held Beef Judging Day 
at the farm of Mr. Orville 
Wyman on Feb. 22. There, 
the members judged two 
classes of cattle -- market 
and feeder. Club members 
wish to extend their thanks to 
Mr. Wyman for the use of his 
facilities and his help. 
Following the judging, mo- 
thers of the members served 
hamburgers at the Bon 
Accord Arena, which every- 
one well enjoyed. After 
lunch, a club tour of calves 
was conducted, giving mem- 
bers an opportunity to see 
other members’ calves. The 
day was completed by a 
toboggan party and fun. The 
Bon Accord 4H Beef Club 
Public Speaking will be held 
on March 17 at 7 p.m., in the 
Arena. Everyone is welcome 
to attend. This report was 
submitted by club reporter, 
Marsha Rigney. 


REGIONAL MEETING ON 


FOR PLUMBING 


FOR PLUMBING AND HEATING 
IN THE GIBBONS AND SURROUNDING AREA 
RENOVATIONS AND ROUGHED-IN PLUMBING 


PHONE -- 


GIBBONS 
PLUMBING 


& HEATING 
& SERVICE LTD. 
923-2480 


ALSO RECORDING IF NO ONE IN OFFICE 


AMBULANCE SERVICE 


The Bon Accord St. John 
Ambulance Emergency Ser- 
vices held a meeting at the 
school on March 6 with 
representatives from the 
surrounding areas of St. 
Albert, Morinville, Legal, 
Redwater, Gibbons, Thorhild 
and Fort Saskatchewan Hos- 
pital Board present. Presen- 
tations were made by Garry 
Alford, REP, Director of 
Brooks and District Ambu- 
lance Service, John Byer, 
captain Unit 2, Morinville 
and Nigel Mansfield, super- 
intendent SJAES (Unit 1, 
Bon Accord). Problems faced 
by the ambulance service 
e.g. help and money, were 
discussed. A good response 
by members of the comm- 
unity to the call for volun- 
teers has bolstered the 
emergency service crew. 
With holidays coming up 
more volunteers are needed 
so that no member is tied 
down too severely by being 
tied to a telephone just to 
make sure that when we 
need help, they are there to 
help us all.' The more volun- 
teers, the less time each will 
be required to be on call. The 
SJAES is sponsoring a dance 
on April 10 in the Cave. 
Music is by the Collections, 
tickets are $12 per couple, 
the bar opens at 8, dancing 
from 9 - 1, food is being 
served. Only 140 tickets are 
being sold with many of them 
already spoken for. Tickets 
are available from Pauline, 
or any member of the Emer- 
gency Service. 


The Community Centre 
Board is sponsoring a dance 
in the Cave on March 27 with 
music by the Satellites. 
Tickets are $12 per couple 
and are available from 
Pauline or Doreen. The bar 
opens at 8, dancing from 9 - 1 
and lunch is included. 


The St. John Ambulance 
Service wishes to extend 
thanks to Marie’s Cafe for 
donation of the lunch served 
to visitors at the seminar and 
to Don Grant for the use of 
Ducky’s Tavern where lunch 
was served. 


Book exchange is now 


open on Thursdays in the 
Community Centre balcony 
from 2-4and7-9. A good 
selection of books is now on 
hand. 


Bingo jackpot is now $375 
in 53 numbers. Winner of the 
bonanza was Rose Kitzul. 
Fae McBride and Donna 
Thomas shared the jackpot 
consolation. 


Western Lottery tickets 
are available from members 
of the Golden Gems and good 
citizen, Pauline Mansfield. 


ROCK AMBULANCE 
PARTY 


Who said Rock ’N Roll is 
dead! Not the Bon Accord 
unit of the St. John Ambu- 
lance Emergency Service. 
Saturday, April 10 at the Bon 
Accord Arena, a dance will 
be held featuring the fabu- 
lous Collections in full rock ’n 
roll gear. 

A chicken supper with 
wine - if you wish it - will be 
served between 7:30 and 
8:30 p.m. Everyone is asked 
to join in the fun of the fifties 
by getting dressed for the 
occasion, that means leather, 
grease and bobby socks. For 
the import section of the 
community, don’t forget the 
TEDS, the drapes and crush- 
ers. 

For your advance tickets 
contact Pauline Mansfield at 
921-3625 or any unit mem- 
ber. 


Registration for soccer, 
softball and baseball on 
March 17, 18 and 19 only, at 
Bon Accord Hall, from 7 to 9 
p.m. Fee $5. per player. 
Membership is necessary, 
available at Hall for $10.00. 

Baseball six years and up 
to senior mens, softball six 
years and up senior mens 
and ladies, soccer six years 
and up. If no team, money is 
refunded. Anyone interested 
in scorekeeping, timing, 
umpiring, coaching or ass- 
isting, for information con- 
tact Don Bland, 921-2374; 
Sandi Samis 921-3739; John 
West 921-3638; Gale Critch- 
ley 921-3646; John Doughty 
921-3629; Mike Hartley 921- 
3512. 

For early registration mail 
cheque or money order to 
Doreen Hewitt, Bon Accord. 


Practice good housekeeping; 
keep tools and implements 
in their proper places. 


Don't limit your concern 
about falls to activities 
done off the ground. 


Printed by this publication in the interest of farm safety. 


ATTENTION ALL MEMBERS 


CAISSE POPULAIRE DE 
MORINVILLE SAVINGS AND CREDIT UNION LTD. 


PLAN TO ATTEND YOUR ANNUAL: 
MEETING AND BANQUET 
TO BE HELD 
SATURDAY, MARCH 13th, 1976 
IN THE MORINVILLE CENTRE 


REFRESHMENTS 6:00 P.M. 
MEETING, DANCE AND SOCIAL TO FOLLOW 


TICKETS - $3.00 PER PERSON, AND AVAILABLE AT 
THE CREDIT UNION OFFICE ONLY 


BANQUET 7:00 P.M. 


ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1976 - 29 


REALTORS 


YOUR AD ON 


THIS PAGE WILI 
REACH HUNDREDS OF BUYERS 


DEVELOPMENTS LTD 
483-1851 
invites you to 


Abinedale 


REALTY CTD. 
REALTORS 


BILL VENESS 459-6137 
ERIC W. BOKENFOHR 459-6827 


AL STRUMECKI 459-5624 
MARCEL LABONTE 939-4241 
VINCE MALONEY 459-6308 


GRAHAM BLACKLOCK 459-3785 
ROLF JAUCH 459-7954 
ELLEN PRYSTAI 973-3795 


xh 7 Rs 
Beco ae B | Ae 
F Rete) 


VAGN CHRISTENSEN 


ESTER CHRISTENSEN 


7. BILL MACIBORSKI 454-2618 
OPEN HOUSE Come in and meet Ester and Vagn Christensen our GUY HEBERT, GENERAL MANAGER 459-5491 
husband and wife team working and living in St. 
S AT ] 5 S UN ] 5 Albert. For all your real estate needs call the team at 
is - Block Bros. N.R.S., Sturgeon Shoppers Plaza - 
458-2288 or Pager 426-5880 Ext. 915. GAZETTE 


Trade ins welcome 
Full price from $61,991 


Morry Dodd ... 488-4323 Phil Filipchuk ... 459-7170 
Gene Checora . . 458-0745 Brian Duguid ... 435-6353 


CLASSIFIEDS 


act. 
LIST or SELL 
CALL - 459-7744 _20 PERRON STREET som 
MARCEL OR EXILDA LAROCQUE .......- 459-5052 a 
RITA WOERTMAN .........--2-0e00eee 0 459-7411 iis eal bs Galen ee 6 mee 
LUCIENNE DOLLEVOET ..........-+-+ +++ 458-0854 ————<— —— 
PAUL MERCIER §....0550000.0cnssceass 459-3925 — 
“NOW 11 OFFICES TO WORK FOR YOU.” 
ehaenntiie GRAHAM 


Give Heart Fund H 
Alberta Heart Foundation\t% 


Ze: 
& [" REALTY CO. LTD. 


ST. ALBERT 
BEST BUYS 


FOREST LAWN GRANDIN PARK 


REALTY & INSURANCE 
(1976) LTD. 


PHONE: 458-2800 


LACOMBE PARK SHOPPING CENTRE 


WE HAVE BUYERS --- WE NEED LISTINGS 


If transferred or just selling --- Please call us 


WE MAY NOT BE THE BIGGEST, 
BUT WE ARE VERY EFFICIENT 
AND BELIEVE IN GOOD SERVICING 


CALL: 


a MRS, THERESE BOURGEOIS co iiceccccsnscreeteevedectondespeceveys 


CALL 


Asn BRU OMOTETONL 470. 5.4 05419 i000 6. 09 900 0 CO Ra Yb bck awe baka 
PEE EC IN EE 5 Fs 65 cay Rive Ve CEU ANC EWES had ideenl teehee 


Di eeee 


Ce ee 
Dit eo ee 2 


REAL ESTATE 484-7126 


STAN LINDSAY ARLENE CRAWFORD 
458-0215 459-7584 


LIVING & WORKING IN ST. ALBERT 
30 - ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1976. 


ie ee ee ee ee a 2 oY 


If transferred --- we are affiliated with EQUITY TRADERS --- 
and we have agents in every major city across Canada 


HOME PET CARE 
ST. ALBERT RESIDENTS. Will provide daily care for 
your pets in your home while on vacation. 


TIME TO REVIEW 
YOUR LIFE INSURANCE 


For Competent Counsel 


PHONE: 424-8081 OR 458-0169 


SHELEMEY INSURANCE 
CONSULTANTS LTD. 


2 RIEL DRIVE 


SPECIALIZING IN 
VOLKSWAGEN REPAIRS 
AND RECONDITIONED 

ENGINES 
PHONE: Bus. 459-7660 
AFTER HOURS: 459-7864 


OPEN 8 a.m. - 5 p.m. 
MONDAY TO FRIDAY 
8 a.m. - 12 NOON 

SATURDAY 


THERE YOU 
ARE 
HERE WE 
ARE 
Listen To Fun Radio And Win 


St. Albert Business & Professional Directory 


ACCOUNTANT 


GEORGE T. HAWKEN 
REGISTERED INDUSTRIAL ACCOUNTANT 
PHONE - 459-3517 


Public Accounting, Income Tax Consulting 
and Public Steno 458-0099 


[Evening and Saturday appointments accepted] 


WHEELER & McQUEEN 
CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS 


105 STURGEON SHOPPERS PLAZA PH. 459-4471 


CHIROPRACTORS 


DR. JOYCE BROWN-WEEKS 53 STURGEON ROAD 
BY APPOINTMENT -- PHONE: 459-4981 


DR. ROBERT G. DOBIE 12 PERRON STREET 
OFFICE HOURS 
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY .... 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon 
1:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. 
Evening hours and House Calls by Appointment 
OFFICE: 459-6911 -- RESIDENCE: 459-4706 


DR. E. H. THOMAS 29 PERRON STREET 
OFFICE HOURS 
MON., TUES., THURS. -- 1 P.M. TO 6P.M. 
OFFICE: 459-8183 RESIDENCE: 459-6534 


DENTAL LABORATORY 


LEES DENTAL LABORATORY 
Certified Technician 5-7 Bradburn Thompson Block 
10160 - 101 STREET, EDMONTON 
PHONE: 422-8233 EVENINGS: 459-7193 
J.J. LEES, PROPRIETOR 


A & B DENTURE CLINIC 
Cub Shaw 
Certified Dental Mechanic 
BUS. PHONE 453-1424 
RES. PHONE 476-8460 
12421 - 118 Avenue 
Upstairs - Room | 


Contact -- Paul R. Shelemey, C.L.U. 


BURTON 
DENTURE CLINIC 
Certified Dental Mechanics 
PHONE: 422-3235 
10135 - 102 St. [Upstairs] 
Edmonton, Alberta. 


PHONE - ANNEMARIE ELKINS -- 459-4243 


WASHOMATIC 
APPLIANCES & TELEVISION 


Domestic -- Commercial ~ Sales ~- Service ~ & Parts 


*Speed Queen Washers and Dryers 
eRebuilt Washers, Dryers, Ranges and Fridges 
*Hoover eInglis ¢Kelvinator 
*McClary-Easy Hitachi Kenmore 
*Speed Queen *Simplicity *Beatty 
¢Flectrohome °G.E. © Westinghouse 


476-5115 13020 - 82 Street 476-5550 


ps | 

y: WE SERVE 
DELICIOUS 

CHINESE FOOD 


DINING LOUNGE 


'0582 - 104 Street 
eo *.£ 326-3975 


HOMEMAKER SERVICE 


HELP SOCIETY -- PHONE: 459-5159 


INSURANCE 


DRAYDEN INSURANCE & ACCOUNTING LTD. 
PHONE -- 459-4416 


FORREST INSURANCE SERVICES LTD. 
11 ST. ANNE ST. PHONE: 458-1122 


DOME INSURANCE SERVICES LTD. 
#28 GRANDIN SHOPPERS PARK 
PHONE: 459-4481 


OPTICAL DISPENSARIES 


GRANDIN OPTICAL PHONE: 459-7742 
23 GRANDIN SHOPPERS PARK MALL 

MON. TUES. & FRI. .........-000+- 9 A.M. -5 P.M. 

WED. & THURS. 9a.m.-9p.m. SAT.9 a.m. - 1 p.m. 


ST. ALBERT OPTICAL DISPENSARY __ PH. 459-3451 
MEDICAL CENTRE, ST. MICHAEL STREET 
MONDAY TO FRIDAY ............. 
TUESDAY & THURSDAY EVENING . 6 P.M. - 8 P.M. 
SATURDAY ...........-00000s 9 A.M. TO 12 NOON 


VALUE OPTICAL 
109A STURGEON SHOPPERS PLAZA 
PHONE: 458-2508 


Monday through Saturday -- 10a.m. to 5:30 p.m. 
Thursday and Friday evenings till 8:00 p.m. 


DENTAL MECHANICS 


CHEKERDA 
DENTURE CLINIC 
MIKE CHEKERDA 

Certified Dental Mechanic 
PHONE: 475-0011 
13562 - 97 St. 


426-6757 - 24 HRS. 


STURGEON 
DENTURE CLINIC 
Certified Dental Mechanic 
12 Perron St., St. Albert 
PHONE: 459-6754 


PRING TIME SPECIA 


RECOVER AVERAGE 2 PCE. SET FROM OUR 
LARGE SELECTION OF FABRICS IN STOCK 


ONLY $385.” 


PLEASE NOTE: NO HOUSE CALLS CAN BE MADE 
ON THIS SPECIAL 


ST. ALBERT UPHOLSTERING 


PHONE: 459-6313 


11 PERRON STREET, ST. ALBERT 


LOYAL ORDER 


OF MOOSE 
142 St & 144 Ave 


SUNDAYS7:3Qpm 
Admission 3 cards $1.00 


Extra cards 25‘ ea. 
BONANZA 3 for $1.00 
MINI BONANZA 


——_—_— OPTOMETRISTS 


DRS. DOLMAN AND MUNCEY 
OPTOMETRISTS 
ASSOCIATE MEDICAL CLINIC 
MONDAY TO FRIDAY -- 9:00 A.M. - 5:00 P.M. 
JUESDAY & THURSDAY EVENING -- 6 p.m. - 8 p.m. 
SATURDAY -- 9 A.M. TO 12 NOON 


DR. DON LeDREW 23 Grandin Shoppers Park Mall 
MON. TUES. & FRI. ............+.. 9 A.M. - 5 P.M. 
WED. & THURS. 9a.m.-9p.m. SAT.9 a.m. -1 p.m. 

OFFICE PHONE: 459-7741 RESIDENCE: 459-8153 

MORINVILLE OFFICE -- WED. & FRI. PH. 939-4311 


PHARMACISTS 


GRANDIN PRESCRIPTION CENTRE 
PH. 459-5815 . Grandin Medical Bldg., St. Albert 
ED DUNIK - 459-7126 DON SAUNDERS - 459-6501 


MEDICAL CENTRE DRUGS 
PHONE: 459-8545 *MEDICAL CENTRE 
HOURS: 9 A.M. -9 P.M. MONDAY - FRIDAY 
9A.M.-12NOONSATURDAY CLOSED SUNDAYS 
MR. MALCOLM McKAY MRS. MARIE de BRUIJN 


VETERINARIAN 


GRANDIN VETERINARY HOSPITAL 
DR. M. E. RASBERRY 
Grandin Shoppers’ Park 


PHONE [403] 458-2828 
[Beside Bowling Alley} 


HELTEN TRAVEL LTD. 11 PERRON STREET 
[ACROSS FROM THE ARENA} 
PHONE: 459-6661 -- 24 HOURS 
Free ticket delivery to your Home or Office 


WRIGHT 
DENTURE CLINIC 
W. 1. WRIGHT 
Certified Dental Mechanic 
ROOM 160, 12406 - 112 AVENUE 
EDMONTON, ALBERTA TSM 289 


459-6027 PHONE: 454-2222 


ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1976 - 31 


REGULAR EVENTS 


MONDAY - 7:45 p.m. 
JOURNOUD |]M°NPAY < 745 = | NATIONAL LIFE 
Parish Hall. ae 
Dupe WEDNESDAYS - Comm- ‘li beatedpas: Sect ay 4 
on em ity League BINGO, Co- 
(AFTER 6 P.M.) aueis aa St. an OF CANA 
INTERIOR and EXTERIOR 


MOTHER’S DAY OUT 

Commencing November 
13th, Mother’s Day Out will 
run every Thursday until 
December 18, recommen- 
cing Thursday, January 
8th. 
BOOKINGS - 459-4534 


VOLUNTEERS - 459-4966 


painting of residences and 
commercial buildings. Pa- 
per Hangings - viny wall 
covering. All work done by 
qualified tradesmen and 
guaranteed. 
REASONABLE 


*Registered Retirement 
Savings Plans 

¢Mortgage Insurance 

Individual Insurance 

ePension Programming 

. : ¢Corporation Insurance 

ae | . ay a. ¢Key Man Insurance 

G. A. [ANDY] RAYMOND ¢Deferred Compensation 

‘ Serving the Community eGroup Insurance 


FOR INFORMATION CALL 
BUSINESS: 454-8631 RESIDENCE: 458-1334 
11821 - 123 STREET, EDMONTON 


HECTOR’S PAINTING 
& DECORATING LTD.: 


RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERCIAL 
FREE ESTIMATES PHONE: 459-4359 


eResidential ¢Commercial °Insurance eAuto 


anger GLASS & MIRROR in. 


8 RIEL DRIVE 


°Mirror — *Glass *Bathtub Enclosures 
*Tabletops ¢Mirrored Closet Doors 
eAuto Picture Windows Repairs § *Screens 


WINDSHIELDS REPLACED 
459-4521 or 459-3735 


All Installations Done by Qualified Journeyman 
8:30 A.M. - 5:30 P.M. -- MONDAY TO SATURDAY 
AFTER HOURS: 458-2533 

FRED A. BENDLE, MANAGER 
—  erversd 


1 
| 
Ps] 


BONAVENTURE UNION 76 
CAR WASH AND GAS STATION 
“WE SERVE YOU" 


MOTOR HOTEL 


NIGHTLY ENTERTAINMENT 
LOUNGE AND TAVERN 


UNDER NEW OWNERS 
AND MANAGER 


- 


@ INTER-ORGANIZATION 
BANQUET ROOMS 
SWIMMING POOL : COMMUNICATION 


TELEVISION AND RADIO 


ST. ALBERT TRAIL AT 125 AVENUE 


BOB-CAT 
& BACKHOE SERVICE 


*Loading *Levelling *Driveway Stripping 
¢Foundation Boring *Pavement and Concrete Breaking 
If you are being married in the summer or fall of 1976 
plan io atiend the Welcome Wagon Bridal Shower to be 
held a: the Chateau Lacombe on March 23, 1976, 
beginning at 7:45 p.m. Admission is by invitation only. 
For more information and your free invitation please 
phone one of the following numbers -- 


PHONE -- C. WATT 
RES. - 459-7538 BUS. - 458-1700 


ZION BAPTIST CHURCH 
(BAPTIST UNION OF WESTERN CANADA) 
NORTHWEST EDMONTON -- 11908 - 132 AVE. 


469-2124 -- 435-5574 -- 459-7636 


CATERING 
ANYWHERE SMORGASBORD 


BUFFET LUNCHES 


ANY TIME WEDDINGS 
ANY SIZE BANQUETS 


STAFF PARTIES 


REV. W. TOLLER RES. 455-3289 


10:30 A.M. Morning Worship - Church School 
7:30 p.m. Youth Group and Evening Fellowship 


House of Quon 


MOST AUTHENTIC CHINESE 
RESTAURANT 


YEN LOUNGE AND 
DINING LOUNGE 


TAKE OUT ORDERS 


WE WILL CATER 
AT YOUR BARBECUES 


LOCATION BINGOS 
OR OURS MEETINGS 


CLUB MOCOMBO 


PARKING FOR 300 CARS 
200 —- ST. ALBERT TRAIL 
476-7676 13035 - 97 Street ge rere le 


32 - ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1976. 


ST. PETER’S EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH 
[WISCONSIN SYNOD] 
PHONE: 459-4385 -- 459-4965 


Come 
Worship 
oi 
oe TA 


Braeside Presbyterian 
6 BERNARD DRIVE, ST. ALBERT, ALBERTA. 
MINISTER - REV.N. C. GORDON PHONE: 459-8568 
11:00 A.M. SERVICE OF DIVINE WORSHIP 
SECOND SUNDAY IN LENT 
NURSERY CARE FOR INFANTS 


CHURCH SCHOOL CLASSES - Kindergarten to Grade 
10 at 9:45 and 11:00 a.m. and Tuesday evening. 


ELIM CHAPEL 
PASTOR K. AGREY PHONE: 458-2627 


SUNDAY SERVICES AT 10:30 A.M. 
7:00 P.M. FELLOWSHIP SERVICES 
WEDNESDAY 7:00 P.M.- [JESUS NIGHT] 
BIBLE CLASSES FOR ALL AGES 


ALL ARE WELCOME 


St. Albert Evangelical Lutheran 
11 Glenview Crescent ' Across from the Town Hall 


Guest Speaker: Chairman Phone: 459-7510 
Pastor Ken Kuhn, Chaplain U of A 


9:45 a.m. Sunday School and Adult Bible Class 
11:00 a.m. Family Worship Service 


‘“‘YOUR FRIENDLY FAMILY CHURCH” 


St. Albert Roman Catholic 


SATURDAY EVENINGS - 7:30 P.M. 
SUNDAYS - 8:00 a.m., 9:30 a.m., and 11 a.m., 12:30 
p.m. and 7:30 p.m. FRENCH MASS AT CHAPEL AT 
9:30 A.M. 


JOINT HOME OF 
St. Albert United Church 


REV. L. J. MUSTO PHONE: 459-8259 


10.A.M. 
MORNING WORSHIP - Pre-schooler Sunday School 
and Nursery at the Church. Junior Congregation at the 
Sir Alexander Mackenzie School. 


COFFEE FELLOWSHIP 
AND 


St. Matthew's Anglican Church 
REV.J.C.BARFORD PHONE: 455-0388 


SUNDAY, MARCH 14th -- 12:00 NOON 
HOLY COMMUNION & SUNDAY SCHOOL 


NURSERY FACILITIES AVAILABLE 


Enter Church Parking Lot via Green Grove Drive 
[Off Sir Winston Churchill Ave. and Perron St. | 


First Baptist Church 


ST. ALBERT 
REVEREND BILLY HEATH 
MEETING AT - Vince J. Maloney Junior High School 


65 SIR WINSTON CHURCHILL AVENUE 
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m. Church Service - 11:00 a.m. 
7:00 p.m. - Home Fellowships 


Further Information - 459-3933 -- 12 Malmo Ave. 
Supporting World Missions through the 
Southern Baptist Convention 


, Calahoo 967-2158 


MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE 


$t. Albert's Own Alta Brite Carpet 


“Care. Professional upholstery and 


carpet cleaning. See our ad on 
Page 2. Morinville and District, no 
travelling charges. Ph. 459-5820 

3499/1/tfn 


Split Birch wood $90 per cord, 
$50. % Cord. Delivered. Winter- 
burn - 962-3587 610/6/tfn 
Canoes - Factory seconds 15 and 
17 ft. fibreglass -$150 up. Ph. 
459-3959 728/8/tfn 
500 Bushels Parkland Barley 92% 
germination, cleaned $3.00 per 
bushel. Ph. 973-6972 = 733/8/tfn 


One 5h.p. Lawn-Boy Snowblower, 
one 350,000 BTUH Propane 
Heater, one Wacker B.S. 60 ft. 
Stomper. Less than 20 hours on all 
items Ya price. Ph. 459-8423 after 
7 p.m. 779/8/tfn 


9/p2 


Macrame - hangers, lamps and 
curtains. Ph, 458-0852 1048/9/tfn 


Lovely Christening gowns, hand- 
crocheted, also baby ponchos. Ph. 
458-0099 1238/10/c2 
R.C.A. Cabinet stereo. Offers. 
1239/10 


Think Summer! Coleman Brandy- 


wine hardtop Camper. Ph. 
458-0981 
GARAGE SALE - SATURDAY, 


MARCH 13, 1976. 48 GREER CRES. 
Kitchen table and four chairs, 
good condition. Ph, 458-1575 
1227/10c 
White Kenmore range, very good 
condition - $150. Ph. 458-1276 
1228/10c 
12’' Portable TV, B & W. Excellent 
condition $50. Ideal for camping 
vehicle, Rec. Room, kitchen, 
bedroom. Ph, 475-7058 
1229/10c 
Portable Dishwasher, fridge - $50 
each. Ph. 459-3604 1231/10¢ 
Kenmore electric clothes dryer, 
white. Excellent condition - $75. 
Ph. 459-4981 after 6 p.m. 
34'' Plywood truck canopy 
windows, all around - $130. Ph. 
939-4247 after 5 p.m., 939-4535 
business hrs. 10/p3 
Two electric Skidoos, 1970 - 335E; 
1971 - 335 with double trailer, all 
in good condition. Best offer. Ph. 
458-3114 afterS p.m. = 1216/10c 
Avocado Westinghouse self-clean 
stove with speed broiler and 
rotisserie. Excellent condition. 
Ph. 459-4779 1205/10 
G.E. White Electric Stove, what 
offers? Ph. 458-2474 after 6 p.m. 
1203/10c 
Co-op Snowblower, and one IHC 
riding mower. Ph, 961-3668 after 


6 p.m. 1212/10¢ 
Two Lacrosse sticks - $10 each. 
Skyline Jr. Golf Clubs - $25, Ph. 
459-7996 1215/10¢ 


Two Love Seats and swivel 


Rocker. Ph. 458-1480 1061/10c 
One bedroom home to be moved. 
Eight years old. Ph. 459-3482 
1062/10c 
Teak table with four chairs. $150. 
Ph. 458-1079 1065/10c 


Park Wheat 96% - $5 per Bu., 
delivered or pickup from Seed 


Plant, April 19 to 26. Ph. 
5-973-5741 1067/10c 
Simplicity Dryer - bookcase 


headboard and frame for single 
bed, 4-speed mono portable 
record player and hair dryer. Ph. 
458-1598 after 5 p.m. 
1068/10c 
9’’ Beaver Table saw, set of 
carpenter's tools. Like new. Ph. 
973-5235 1071/10c 
Westinghouse wringer washer, 
good condition - offers. One 10 
ply traction 900 x 20 truck tire, 
like new - offers. Ph. 459-8353 
Best Offers - Girl's skates, size 
13 and 1, hockey equipment, size 
10; bar and bookcase, skidoo 
outfits, size 10; Record player 
$10. Ph, 458-1087 1073/10c 
Westinghouse modern electric 
stove, good condition. $75. Ph. 
459-3785 1075/10c 
McLary Easy washer and dryer, 
good condition. Ph, 459-3743 
1250/10c 
Slightly used Olympic portable 
typewriter in leather case - $115. 
Ph. 458-3354 1057/10/tfn 
1975 Sears 7.5 h.p., outboard 
motor [deluxe model], plus 
remote tank. Used less than 20 
hours. Save $100 on 1976 price. 
$325. Ph. 458-0156 
Admiral Console 26’’ Coloured 
T.V. 1975. $500. Ph. 459-8035 
1058/10c 
BASEMENT SALE. Trailer Mirrors. 
Kitchen table, camping equip- 
ment, two bikes, 22 Rifle, toys. 
Ph. 459-6790 after 6 p.m. 
Brand new baby front and 
back-pack $8., Changing table 
$10., Umbroller stroller $10., 
Men's and woman's cross country 
skis, boots and poles, never been 
used - $75 per set. Ph. 458-0326 
1244/10c 
1975 Lawn-Boy lawnmower, Elec- 
trohome humidifier, rubber plant, 
picnic table, wheelbarrow. Ph. 
459-3741 1234/10¢ 
FLEA MARKET - SUNDAY, MARCH 
14th, 1- 5 P.M. COMMUNITY 
HALL, ANTIQUES, COLLECTIBLES, 
BOOKS, COINS, CRAFTS & WHITE 
ELEPHANT. ENQUIRIES 458-2522. 
DOOR PRIZE. WINNING TICKET 
FOR FEB. 29 - 609565 
Drapes, gold and orange acrylic 
weave, 96’’ x 168°’ cleaned, 
ready for new home, asking $100. 
Must sell. Call after 5 p.m. 
458-1926 1236/10¢ 
Leonard electric range, excellent 
condition $95. Phone after 5:30 
458-1479 1237/10c 


— eS 


One Peterborough 12 ft. Alum- 
inum boat w/Chrysler 9.99 h.p. 
motor, oars, two years old. Ph. 
Ken days at 939-4325; evenings - 
459-5951 8/tfn 


200 c.m. Blizzard skis, poles, size 
10. Rieker men’s ski boots. Best 
offer. Queen size waterbed, foam 
upholstered frame, medium br- 
own velour covering. Heater, 
never used - $400 new. Best 
offer. 11 - 3’ - 6 x 20° x 24” 
Wedges, high density foam. 19 - 
4’ - 6" x 26" x 24" Wedges. High 
density foam. 160’’ Foam Tube. 
12°’ Diameter. Call Jeanne 
423-2502 evenings. nc/tfn 


VEGETABLES 


FOR SALE 


HEALTH FOOD 
Green cabbage, carrots, turnips, 
beets and potatoes. Low’s 
973-3585 677/7/c4 


AUTOMOTIVES 


1971 Rambler Ambassador 
station wagon. Excellent condi- 
tion. Ph. 961-3899 775/8/c4 


1972 Toyota Corolla 1200, 42,000 
miles. Ph. 939-4143 after 6 p.m. 
1007/9/c4 
1972 Dodge Demon 2 dr. H.T., 6 
auto., P.S., 46,000 miles. Ph. 
939-4143 after6p.m. 1007/9/c4 
1974 Volvo 144 G.L. automatic 
Leather interior. Ph. 433-0628 
9/c/2 
1972 Pontiac Catalina air cond., 
all power equipped, 350, 2 barrel 
engine $1695. Offers. Phone Ron 
459-8211 793/9/c4 
1974 LTD., Brougham air con- 
ditioned, cloth interior, excellent 
condition. Ph. 458-2760 794/9/c2 


1973 Ford Van - converted, 
chrome wheels, 302 automatic 
Ph. 458-2760 794/9/c2 


1967 Ford, 283 V8, radials, CB 
headlights, rear window de- 
froster. Very good condition. 
$625. Ph. 939-4682 1063/10c 
1974 Pontiac, Lemans. P.5., P.B., 
350 auto., rear defog., 5 radials, 
radio and 8 track. Immaculate 
condition. Reason for selling - 
buying Ya ton. Ph, 423-3437 days 
or 939-2096 evenings. 
1976 Vega Hatchback auto., 
radio, etc., under 500 miles. Save 
$400. May be seen at 132 
Goodridge Drive. Ph. 459-3925 
1059/10c 
1966 Meteor Station wagon V8 
automatic, P.S.* P.B.* excellent 
running condition. Ph. 459-8396 
1242/10/c2 
1963 Pontiac, 2 door, 6 cylinder, 
standard. P.S., Radio. $100. Ph. 
458-1464 1246/10c 
1969 Chev. Station wagon, 9 
seater, automatic, good rubber. 
Ph. 459-8396 1241/10c 
1975 Dodge Maxi-Van. First 
$5,000 takes it. Ph. 458-1051 


1974 Mercury Bobcat Runabout, 
9,000 miles, Wife’s car. Imma- 
culate. Ph. 459-8463 1211/10¢ 


TRUCKS 


FOR SALE 


1969 Ford Van, Econoline, 
camperized and carpeted, V8 
engine, automatic transmission, 
body good, radial tires. Priced to 
sell. Ph. 459-4969 238/1/tfn 


1972 % ton Standard V8 short 
wheel base, excellent condition. 
43,000 miles. Ph. 459-6591 even- 


1976 Ford F700 custom cab, new - 
675 miles. Offers. Ph. 459-4359. 
Can be seen at Pacific 66, St. 
Albert Trail. 891/9/tfn 


MOBILE HOMES 


& TRAILERS 


1975 Bonair Hardtop, 3-way 
Fridge, furnace, sleeps six. Ph. 
459-7256 after 5 p.m. 713/7/tfn 


1976 Fleetwood 14 ft. wide, two 
or three bedrooms, asphalt 
shingles. $11,980. Dennis - 
484-0000. 902/5/tfn 
1972 Winnebago Motor Home, 22 
ft. self contained, A-1 condition. 
Call R. Bentz Motors Ltd., 
Thorhild - 398-3696; St. Albert 
458-0298 628/6/tfn 
1972 - 20 ft. Empress Motor 
Home. Fridge, stove, air condi- 
tioning, tape player, 3 speed 
automatic 383 motor Dodge 
chassis Ph. 
458-2913 


Low mileage 


1975 TIOGA WITH DOD- 
GE MOTOR, 4,000 MILES, 
LIKE NEW. WILL SAC. 
RIFICE FOR $15,000. NEW 


PRICE $17,000. 


CALL - 458-1183 EVNGS. 
459-4234 DAYS 


1972 - 14’ x 68’ Mobile Home, 
plus 14x 20’ family room with 
fireplace. Ph. 459-5133 
1222/10/c3 
One 20 ft. Motor Home, low 
mileage, excellent condition. Ph. 
923-2368 Gibbons. 1217/10c 


FARM 


MACHINERY 


560 IHC Diesel Tractor, major 
overhaul on head. John Deere 900 
Series 15’ heavy duty coil spring 
cultivator. IHC No. 37 - 10’ 
Tandem Disc on rubber. Oliver 4 - 
14” Trip Bottom Plow on rubber 
For information phone after 5 
p.m. 458-1422 774/8/c4 
One Ajax hay stack mover 8 ton, 
good condition. One Farmhand 12 
ft. hay basket and push-off, good 
condition. Ph. 1-998-3122 Ft. 
Sask. 1035/9/c2 


ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16, 1976 


GAZETTE CLASSIFIED ADS 


Cost is $1.00 per week for 10 words if paid within one 
week of publication. After that date a bill is mailed and 
20 cents is added. For ads longer than 10 words, charge 
is 10 cents per word extra, PHONE: 458-2240 
DEADLINE: 12 NOON TUESDAY 


Notice To Advertisers 


DISPLAY -ADVERTISING FOR THE GAZETTE 
MUST BE IN BY 9P.M. ON MONDAY FOR THE 
CURRENT WEEK. THE CO-OPERATION OF 
ADVERTISERS IN HAVING THEIR COPY READY 
ON THURSDAY OR FRIDAY WOULD BE 
APPRECIATED, AND WOULD ALLOW EXTRA 
CARE BY THE LAYOUT DEPARTMENT DISPLAY 
ADVERTISING RATE IS $2.00 PER COLUMN 


INCH. 


HOUSES 
FOR SALE 


1046 sq. ft. 3 Bedrooms upstairs, 
all new rugs and two bedroom 
basement suite. Revenue $275 a 
month. Garage 1% size land- 
scaped. $71,900. Ph. 459-6824 

; 10/p2 


PRIVATE SALE - St. Albert 4 
bedroom bi-level, basement com- 
pletely finished. Ph. 459-7878 
after 6 p.m. 1230/10 


PRIME LOCATION - 4 bedroom 
Split Level. Ideal family home 
with large yard and lots of trees. 
Located in Grandin Park within 
walking distance of shopping 
centre, schools and swimming 
pool. Call today JOYCE RYDER at 
458-2800 or 459-6007. Graham 
Realty 


LEGAL 


Beautiful 1652 sq. ft. 7 
room, 3 bedroom bungalow 
on outskirts of Legal. On 
paved highway. Large sun- 
ken living room, complete 
with brick fireplace, family 
room overlooking large 
patio, complete with built- 
in brick barbecue. Base- 
ment partially finished. 
This home is fully carpeted, 
including central vacuum 
system. Priced well below 
replacement cost. For For 
more information and 
viewing call -- 
STEVE D’HEER - 484-1177 
OR RES. - 939-3594 
HASTEY REALTY 


ST. ALBERT 
Newly listed, 3 bedroom 
Bi-level Duplex. This home 
features patio doors off the 
kitchen to a large sun-deck, 
large pantry and utility 
room on main floor, new 
power humidifier, front 
drive attached garage. Lar- 
ge lot, 12 baths. Priced at 
$52,900.00. This is a 
feature buy! Call GENE 
CHECORA at 483-1851 or 
Residence at 458-0745. 


MARLO 


Developments Ltd. 


HOUSES 
FOR RENT 


3 bedroom Condominium in 
Ridgewood Terrace. Five app- 
liances. $360 per month. $200. 
damage deposit. April Ist. Phone 
after 6 p.m. 458-2371 

Three bedroom Condominium for 
rent - $360 per month. March Ist. 
Ph. Marion 459-5113 or Pat 
459-6260 ms 1201/10c 


St. Albert - new 3 bedroom 
bungalow, 1% baths, stove, 
carpeted. $400. Possession April 
lst. Damage deposit $200. Ph. 
458-0547 1248/10c 
Three bedroom executive bunga- 
low, sunken living room, rumpus 
room, attached garage. May Ist. 
$425. per month. Ph, 459-8362 
evenings. 1220/10c 
Five bedroom, fridge, stove, 
living room, dining room, shag 
carpet, 2% bathrooms, double 
garage at $425 per month. Write 
Box 1810 Hay River, N.W.T. 
1207/10c 
DID YOU KNOW? Rentex offers 
the widest selection of houses, 
townhouses and suites in St. 
Albert and surrounding areas. 
Many two, three and four 
bedrooms available. RENTEX #5 - 
10015 - 82 Ave., 432-7505; 11007 
- 107 Ave. Seven days per week - 
8 a.m. to 9 p.m. 620/6/tfn 


Suites for Rent 


Modern one bedroom suite, 
available April Ist, broadloom 
throughout, separate entrance. 
Ph. 459-5416 1066/10c 


LAND WANTED 


Wanted to lease acreage or farm 
yard with or without buildings, 
within 30 miles of Edmonton. Ph. 
459-3704 646/6/tfn 


Wanted to Rent 


Wanted to rent in June or July, 
house or basement suite for 
responsible couple and high 
school student. No more than 
$250 per month. Ph. 454-7270. 
1223/10 


- 33 


HOUSES WANTED 


Home needed near Grandin 
Shopping Centre. Older couple 
require two - three bedrooms. 
Home in good condition. Call Iris 
McCaffery at 459-4461; Res. 
458-1592 Buxton Real Estate. 


Sincere buyer requires o three 
bedroom home for under $65,000. 
All cash. Late spring possession. 
Please call Vicky Cameron 
459-4461 or 458-0771. Buxton 


CASH IN 

A FLASH! 
ALL CASH, FAST CASH. 
{IF YOUR HOUSE NEEDS 
REPAIRS, IF YOU ARE 
DELINQUENT ON ANY 
PAYMENTS OR FOR ANY 
REASON AT ALL CALL 
NOW, WE DO NOT WANT 
fO LIST YOUR HOME, 
WE WANT TO BUY IT 
NOW. ANY AREA, ANY 
CONDITION. CALL SULL- 
IVAN REAL ESTATE LTD. 
482-6441, AFTER HOURS 
464-0082, 10435 - 124 ST., 
STE. 202, OPEN DAILY 9 
TO 9, MON. THRU SAT. 


LAND FOR SALE 


LAND FOR SALE 
¥% Land, 240 acres broke, 
fair bldg., power, gravel 
road, four miles from town, 
Athabasca district. Price 
$55,000.00. 


CONTACT: 348-5328 


Farms for Sale 


160 ACRE FARM. 25 miles north of 
Edmonton, broiler feeder opera- 
tion, 3 broiler barns, several 
other buildings, natural gas, good 
home, furniture and appliances 
included. For info call ROGER 
CAQUETTE at 458-2800 or Res. 
458-0617. Graham Realty. 


Suites Wanted 


DESPERATELY NEEDED - furnished 
or unfurnished suite for newly 
married couple. Possession for 
May Ist. Ph. 459-4941 anytime. 

nc/tfn 
Wanted - Immediate Possession, 
one or two bedroom basement 
suite. Ph. 458-3247 1013/9/c 


Housekeeping room for single 


girl. Close to Grandin area or will 
share. Ph. 939-2298. 


Boy's glasses [new], lost between 
Bellevue Cres. and Lorne Akins 


School. Ph. 459-6136 791/9/c4 


Lost - Orange and white male 
cal, vicinity of Gilmore Cres. 
Reward. Ph. 459-8341. 
1078/10c 
Lost ‘‘Bumble’’ small black 
poodle-terrier, tag #483, Reward 
Ph, 459-4565 1247/10c 


Men's plastic brown rim glasses. 
Lost while skating on river. Ph. 
10/nc/2 


458-1373 - reward. 


Found in Toronto Dominion Bank, 
Grandin Shoppers Mall, Friday, 
Feb. 27th - ladies watch. Ph. 
459-5566. Accurate |.D. and pay- 
ment of ad required. 


Would like to purchase student 
desk and chair suitable for 11 
year old boy. Ph, 459-6591 
evenings or weekends. N/C/tfn 


HELP WANTED | 


Full time Waitress wanted at 
Bruin Inn Cafe - Morning Shift. 
\Ph. 459-4444, 4675/30/tfn 


BARTENDERS FOR HIRE - Honest 
reliable and equipped $5 per hour, 
minimum charge four hours also 
tap beer $6. per hour. Wedding, 
banquets and dances. Ph. 
458-3237 or 476-7571 
1038/9/c2 
We require experienced mech- 
anics and apprentices with auto- 
motive background, good com- 
pany benefits. Contact Larry at 
459-7089, 458-2700 or 459-6336. 
380/49/tfn 


DAIRY 
QUEEN 


REQUIRES 
MATURE STAFF 


FULL & PART TIME 
POSITIONS AVAILABLE 


6 P.M. TO CLOSING 
WEEKENDS 


PLEASE PHONE 459-6500 
FOR INTERVIEW 


DAIRY 
QUEEN 


MANAGER 
MANAGER TRAINEES 
We have opportunities in 
the fast food field. Our 
growth and expansion ar: 
such that we have a 
continuing need for quali- 
fied personnel. We offer a 
competitive salary range 
and an incentive bonus 
program along with a five 
day week, three weeks 
vacation and car allowance. 


Phone in confidence for an 
interview to Mr. Max 
McCann or Mr. Hansen at 
455-6469 or 474-3525 be- 
tween 9 a.m, - 5 p.m. 


HOMEMAKERS: Are you interes- 
ted in earning a wage while 
helping families? The Help Society 
is looking for mature women 
skilled in home and child care to 
work as homemakers in St. 
Albert. For more information call 


459-5159 10/c2 
IHC Dealer at St. Albert - Heavy 
Duty Mechanic, Registered. Stur- 
geon Valley Equipment Ltd. Ph. 
458-1746 or 459-5100. 


SALES PERSONNEL REQUIRED FOR 
REAL ESTATE. CALL SICOLI REALTY 
CO, LTD. PH. 459-7744 239/1/tfn 
ORDER DESK AND COUNTER 
PERSONNEL local retail and 
building supply dealer requires 
personnel to train as sales clerks. 
Apply in person to store manager, 
Nelson Lumber Co. Ltd., 12727 St. 
Albert Trail, Edmonton. 10/c2 
Mature part-time help required by 
downtown wool shop. Afternoon 
and evening help required. 
Afternoon from | - 5. Evenings 5 - 
9. Applicants must have good 
knowledge of knitting and cro- 
cheting. Phone Peggy at 459-4211 
or 459-5808 
Receptionist for part-time em- 
ployment in a dental office. 
Experience preferred. If interes- 
ted, reply by mail to Dr. W. C. 
Shewchuk, #100, 54 St. Michael 
Street, St. Albert. 
Part-time live-in housekeeper two 
days per week on permanent 
basis to substitute for para- 
pellegic lady. Ph. 458-3568 
1210/10/tfn 
Cleaning lady required once a 
week, central St. Albert. Ph. 
458-1659 1209/10c 
St. Albert Inn requires reliable, 
sociable person to werk front 
desk, Saturday and Sunday - 8 
a.m. to 4p.m. Ph, 459-5551 
1243/10c 
WANTED: Truck driver for 
Petroleum truck. Must have some 
knowledge of bookkeeping. Apply 
to - Legal Co-op, Box 30, Legal, 
Alberta, stating your experience 
and wages expected. 


AVON 

The day’s not too short to work 
and be a good parent! Succeed at 
both as an Avon Representative. 
Excellent earnings. Call now: 
459-8065, 458-1138 or Mrs. Bruce 
961-3941. Territories available in 

BRAESIDE 

GRANDIN 
LACOMBE PARK 
FOREST LAWN 
RURAL LEGAL, BUSBY 
RURAL ST. ALBERT 


Senior Professional Teaching Staff 
- for 1976/77 winter season. 16% 
hours per week Mail application 
before March 20, 1976 to St. 
Albert Figure Skating Club, c/o 39 
Grandora Crescent, St. Albert. 
T8N OTS. 9/c2 


PART-TIME CASHIER required 
immediately for modern self-ser- 
ve gas bar in Northwest Edmon- 
ton. Cashier experience desirable, 
training provided. Applicant must 
be willing to work alone and be 18 
years of age. Pléase apply at 
12523 St. Albert Trail or phone 
455-2842 for more particulars. 

1240/10/tfn 
Require cleaning lady two morn- 
ings per week. $3.50 per hour. No 
children. Ph, 458-1863 after 5 
p.m. 1224/10c 
Macleod’s require mature part- 
time hardware sales personnel. 
Experience an asset but not 
necessary. Must be able to work 
during day. Ph. 459-5571 for 
appointment 


Experienced waitress wanted 

Apply in person, Silver Lantern, 

Grandin Shoppers Park Mall. 
5329/27/t n 


1975 INCOME TAX 
RETURNS 
Personal tax returns com- 


pleted at reasonable rates. 

Ken Murphy, 11 Alpine 

Blvd. |Akinsdale}. 
PHONE: 458-1909 


34- ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1976. 


SERVICES 


If you need carpet installed call 

Andy Tansem, 459-4971 and 

484-7585. All work guaranteed. 
768/8/c4 


KODIAK Carpet Care Ltd. Carpets 
and upholstery professionally 
steam cleaned. Franchised 3M 
Sotchguard applicators. Member 
of ARCA. Ph. Office 454-6049. - 
evenings 459-3780 tfn 


Renovations and Repairs. After 4 
p.m. 939-2072 weekdays. 
324/48/tfn 


FARM PAINTING. Barlaine Paint- 
ing Ltd., 459-5073 1028/9/tfn 


POWER HUMIDIFIER. Supply, 
installation and servicing. Ph. 
973-3682 623/6/tfn 


St. Albert Kirby Sales & Service, 
129A Sturgeon Shoppers Plaza. 
The ultimate in home mainten- 
ance equipment. Used Vacuums - 
all makes. Ph. 458-3400. 
915/5/tfn 


Have your fireplace built now, 
also any brick and block work. For 
free estimates call 459-8666. 
944/5/tfn 
Small engine services, tune-up 
and repairs to almost all makes of 
small gasoline engines. Scriven’s 
Auto Electric Ltd., 24 Muir Drive. 
Ph. 459-5343 903/5/tfn 
Sampson Bob Cat Service. Snow 
Removal, Residential and Comm- 
ercial. Ph. 459-4589 ‘ 
6899/20/tfn 
SNOW REMOVAL, R. C. CON- 
STRUCTION, ST. ALBERT. PH. 
459-6868 RENE OR 459-8076 BILL. 
WE CLEAN AND HAUL 24 HOURS. 
504/2/tfn 


Bicycle Repairs. Phone after 6 
p.m, 459-3927 1026/9/tfn 


Black Dirt and sand. MIKASKO 
TRUCKING. 479-3652 7266/25/tfn 


SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED _Rene’s 
Vacuum Service. Ph. 961-2482 
5661/6/tfn 


ARTHUR’S PAINTING & DECOR- 
ATING, REASONABLE. FREE ESTI- 
MATES, CALL ANYTIME - 459-5855 
57 SPRINGFIELD CRES. 62/44/tfn 


STUCCO, LATHING, DRYWALL, 
TEXTURED CEILINGS, WALLS & 
RENOVATIONS. ALL WORK GUAR- 
ANTEED. PH. 973-6444 or 452- 
6880. 5562/4/tfn 


Picture framing, reasonable. Ph. 
458-0769 or 458-0060 
275/46/tfn 


Art and Eric's Painting - Free 
Estimates. All work done by 
qualified painters. 35 Mission 
Avenue, St. Albert. Art Roy - 
459-3835, Eric Leland - 489-1808 

4530/29/tfn 


Carpenter will do framing, 
finishing and basement develop- 
ment. Guaranteed workmanship 
at reasonable prices. Phone 
George 459-4791 639/6/tfn 


VIC POST PHOTOGRAPHY 
Professional photography, indus- 
trial, family portraits, weddings. 
Member Professional Photogra- 
phers of Canada. Ph, 459-6988, 
2137/20/tfn 


Watkins Products. Ph. Barb - 
459-4561. 5046/48/tfn 


PIANO TUNER. Vernon A. Hittin- 
ger. Ph. 459-6935 3469/1/tfn 


JOHN D. DRYWALL - Drywall 
taping, plaster repairs, textured 
ceilings, decorative plaster, stuc- 
co, Free estimates. Ph. 458-0819 

6042/11/tfn 


Typewriters - special student 
rates. For fast dependable service 
at reasonable rates. Phone - Leo's 
Business Machine Services, 122 
Bonaventure Shopping Centre - 
454-7661. 3782/44/tfn 


ST. ALBERT OFFICE SERVICES. 
Typing - Thesis, Manuscripts, 
Letters. Also mailing services. Ph. 
459-4536 2730/36/tfn 


Candid Wedding Portraits, Legal 
Photo Studio. Ph. 961-3770 
658/6/tfn 
CALAHOO REPAIRS & SERVICE. 
Beat inflation, out of town repairs 
and welding, farm automotive and 
heavy duty. Anything but the 
kitchen sink. 20 miles West of St. 
Albert. Ask for Ed or Roger. For 
appointment phone 459-3034. 
987/6/tfn 


C.,wall and Taping, rzasonable 
rates. Free estimates. Phone 
Frank - 939-3287 378/49/tfn 


Complete drywall service. Ceil- 
ings textured, Stucco estimating. 
Ph. 459-5677 8/p6 
L & H CONCRETE - All types of 
concrete work, free estimates. 
Phone Bus. 455-6913 or Res. 
452-4769 3357/43/tfn 
George's Painting and Decora- 
ting. Interior and Exterior, Wall- 
paper and Vinyl. Residential and 
Commercial. Free Estimates. Ph. 
458-0608 444/50/tfn 


St. Albert's Own Alta Brite Carpet 
Care. Professional upholstery and 
carpet cleaning. See our ad on 
Page 2. Morinville and district, no 
travelling charges. Ph. 459-5820 

3499/1 /tfn 
Painting and Decorating by Jean. 
For free estimates call 459-4796. 
Paper hanging and vinyl a 
specialty 3152/36/tfn 
SCISSORS SHARPENED -- Stretch 
Couture Fabrics, Grandin Shopp- 
ers Park. Ph. 459-4934. 

. 4398/4/t¥n 
Developing your basement? For 
complete heating service phone 
459-7209 anytime 1249/10/c4 

CONTRACT FLOORING 

New homes, commercial and 
renovations. Check your contract 
prices, St. Albert Decorating Ltd., 
14 Perron St. Ph. 459-6268 or 
459-8447 
Free estimates on rumpus rooms. 
Call Des at 459-4578 1208/10/tfn 
Sewing Machine repairs - all 
brands. Ph. 459-3927 

8970/28/tfn 


ELECTRICAL 


Elect, ., supplies, large variety 
of wiring supplies and fixtures for 
your home, cottage and garage 
Free advice from experienced 
electrician, Sturgeon Electrical 
Supplies, 22 Perron Street, Ph. 
459-5535. Hours Mon., Tuves., 
Wed. and Sat. 9 a.m. - 6 p.m., 
Thurs and Fri. 9 a.m. - 9 p.m. 
2273/32/ttn 


SS SSSSsstsssssshssssssnsssinsstensnsttteenne = 


OFFICE SPACE 


FOR RENT 


Office space for rent - 17 Riel 
Drive. Ph. 459-6157 

355/48/tfn 

Four air conditioned offices, 

separate entrances. Ph. 458-2200 

817/4/tfn 


GRAIN FOR SALE 


SEED BARLEY 
SEED BARLEY HECTOR 
CERTIFIED NO. 1 - $3.50 
BU. BULK. 


PHONE: 939-4021 


SEED OATS 


FRAZER COMMERCIAL 
SEED OATS. $1.60 IN 
ROUGH. 

PHONE: 939-2033 


PRINTING 


PRINTING services, fast efficient 
service. Days 455-8778. Evenings 
459-8535. (PUCKRIN’S PRODUC. 
TION HOUSE). 5898/10/tfn 


PETS 


Professional Poodle Clipping. 
Pickup and Delivery. Call Eileen - 
459-7630 5/p6 
Experienced poodle clipping, gr- 
ooming by Brenda. For app- 
ointment call 459-3468 
4959/34/tfn 
URGENT - Loving homes needed 
for three beautiful mature and 
neutered Siamese cats. Our child 
is allergic. No charge. Ph. 
459-4223 9/p2 
Three kittens are desperate for 
homes. Male and Female. Ph. 
459-7063 1245/10c 
Professional dog grooming, call 
Joanne 459-7018 1232/10 
Free - Two beautiful Budgie birds. 
Large cage available. Phone 
458-2658 
To give to good home, pei 
Canary. Ph. 459-6327. = 1225/10c 


23 gal. Aquarium and accessories. 
1219/10¢ 


Ph. 458-1720 


LESSONS 


Ceramic lessons given Wednesday 
afternoon and Wednesday even- 
ings. Ph. 458-2266 687/7/c4 


SEWING LESSONS: Stretch Couture 


Fabrics, Grandin Shoppers Park. 
Ph. 459-4934 4398/4/tfn 


BUSINESS 


OPPORTUNITIES 


Bob Layton School of Broadcast- 
ing - 9325-158 Street, Edmonton. 
Train on actual studio equipment. 
Phone for appointment - 484-1231 
(24 hours). 4932/33/tfn 


BABY CARE 


Will babysit, my home in 
Sturgeon, three years and up. Ph. 
459-7295 1004/9/c2 


Reliable girl will babysit during 
the day, Monday through Friday 
for working mother. Phone 
anytime at 459-4941 - Lori. ne/tfn 
Will babysit my home weekdays. 
Ph. 458-0006 742/8/tfn 


Mature lady to come in five days 
per week, to care for three year 
old and five month old twins. Ph. 
939-2282 841/4/tfn 


R.N. will give care to babies or 
elderly - per hour, daily basis. Ph. 
458-1950 967/5/tfn 


Babysitter needed Mondays only. 
Mission area. Ph. 459-5762 after 
5 p.m, 1065/10/c2 
Lady will babysit evenings. Ph. 
459-8190 1069/10c 
Will babysit in my own home 
weekdays. Ph. 458-3248 1072/10c 
Sitter required - vicinity Labelle 
Cres. for five and eight year old. 
Monday thru Friday. Ph, 458-0807 


JANET WILLIAMS 
PH. 459-5346 


Will bpbysit my home, one or two 
children. Ph. 459-6909 1235/10c 
Occasional daytime sitter re- 
quires, also occasional evenings. 
Lacombe area. Ph. 458-1575 
1226/10c 
Sitter required Forest Lawn or 
Grandin area. Ph. 459-8153 
1202/10 
Will babysit my home, for working 
mother. Braeside area. Ph. 
459-7471 1213/10c 
Babysitter wanted, lunches and 
after school, near S.A.M. school. 
Nine year old girl. Ph. 458-1333 
1214/10c 


FOR RENT 


SCOTT RENTAL & SALES LTD. 
Equipment for the Homeowner, 
Steam Cleaners for Carpets, 
Contracting Equipment, Chairs, 
Tables, etc. Tools for rent or sale, 
for all types of mechanic's work. 
SNOWBLOWERS { Shovels etc. 
Ph. 458-2929 - 8 Riel Drive, St. 
Albert. 3402/47/tfn 
Storage space available, fenced 
compound with guard dog. Ph. 


459-6668 674/7/ttn 


Typewriters - specidi student 
rates. For fast dependable service 
at reasonable rates. Phone - Leo’s 
Business Machine Services, 122 
Bonaventure Shopping Centre - 
454-7661 3782/44/tfn 


One girl wanted to share three 
bedroom home with two older 
girls. Ph. 458-0381 772/8/ttn 


Personal 


OUR APPRECIATION AND SINCERE 


THANKS TO ALL STAFF OF THE 


STURGEON HOSPITAL FOR TAKING 
SUCH GOOD CARE OF OUR TWINS. 
SPECIAL THANKS TO DR. RAMER 
AND NURSING STAFF OF THE 
PEDIATRIC STATION. KEN AND 
BETTY FROESE. 1233/10c 


BEE DISEASE HITS 
CANADA 


A fungus disease of bees 
that was primarily limited to 
Europe has shown up in 
disturbing proportions in 
Canada. 

A ‘team of researchers, 
headed by an agriculturist at 
the Agriculture Canada Bea- 
verlodge, Alta., Research 
Station, is wasting no time in 
investigating the disease 
called chalk brood. 


THE 
ACTIVE TE 


OW! 


“RON KAYE 
PH. 458-0397 


BARBARA HUSBAND 
PH. 459-8719 


REYDA VISTA 
6 miles west of St. Albert. 1.42 acres. 
View location. 2 storey split. 5S 
appliances, open fireplace. JOHN 
EVANS - 459-6686, 458-1863. 


68 RIDGEWOOD TERRACE 
Only $45,500 for this neat freshly 
decorated end unit with 5 app- 
liances. Drapes in L/R and D/R'’s. 
Developed basement. Low down 
payment to new mtg. WAYNE 
MILLER - 459-6686, 459-8872. 


2 GOULD PLACE 
Executive 2-storey home. 4 Bedrms., 
3 baths, family room with patio doors 
to large deck. Kidney shaped 
swimming pool. Compare prices. 
$131,900. JANET WILLIAMS - 
459-6686, 459-5346. 


#174 GRANDIN 
VILLAGE 
Executive Town- 
house - 4 Bed- 
rooms with main 
floor family room. 
Completed rump- 
us rm. with patio 
door. April Ist 
possession. HAZ- 
ELDENE EVANS 
- 459-6686, 458- 
1863. 


Sir Winston Churchill Avenue 
Albert 


JOHN EVANS 
PH. 458-1863 


| WEBER / 


BROS. REALTY LTO 


FOR ALL YOUR 
BRIDAL STATIONARY 


© RESPONSE CARDS 
© THANK YOU CARDS 


© NAPKINS 


© MATCHES 


© ENVELOPES 


e INVITATIONS 


458-2240 


54 ASPEN 
This super clean 3 bedrm. Bungalow 
is ready for basement development. 
Only 6 months new this home 
features a $39,000 mig. at 102%. 
Drive By. RON KAYE - 459-6686, 
458-0397. 


FAIRHAVEN PARK 
$74,900 for this 1160 sq. ft. 
Bungalow on 3.01 acres. Minutes 
from St. Albert. Beautifully land- 
scaped with lots of trees. Skirl 
Siding. Immaculate condition. TOM 


MILTON - 459-6686, 459-6345. 


40 BRUNSWICK CRES. 

1300 sq. fi. Bi-level with dble. 
attached garage with auto. door 
opener. Patio doors off D/R to nice 
big deck. Inside tastefully decorated 
and immaculate. 3 Bedrms., 2 baths. 
Lovely bar-type kitchen. All this and 
roughed in rms. in basement too! 
BARBARA HUSBAND - 459-6686, 
459-8719. 


ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19, 1976. - 35 


J. VOYTILLA 
THE CHIEF!! 


459-6686 


TOM MILTON 
PH. 459-6345 


WAYNE R. MILLER 
PH. 459-8872 


HAZELDENE EVANS 
PH. 458-1863 


Ed 


Villeneuve - Legal series will be hard fought 


The Sturgeon Valley senior 
hockey league finals are 
shaping up to be a very 
exciting series as both Legal 
Canadiens and Villeneuve 
Voyageurs have some ex- 
cellent hockey talent. 


Legal upset Morinville 
Motors 10-5 in Morinville, 
March 2nd to take the 
semi-final series three games 
to two. 

They carried right on into 


AUCTION SALE 


FRED PARRENT OF CLYDE 


We will sell at his farm located 2 miles North of Vimy 
Corner on Hwy #2, then 4 miles East, % miles North or 
12 miles East, 2% miles South of Westlock or 3 miles 
East, 2% miles South of Clyde. Watch for Posted Signs 


SATURDAY, MARCH 20th -- 10:30 A.M. 


LUNCH AT NOON TERMS: CASH 


TRUCKS AND MACHINERY: 
1974 Chevrolet 2% ton truck, 350 motor dual wheel, 
8.25 x 20 tires, HD rear end with 15 ton hoist, new 8 x 
14 grain box with exts and stock racks, approx. 6000 
miles sale day very good. 

1963 Chev. I ton truck dual wheels motor and brakes 
overhauled, new rad, 10 ton hoist and 8 x 9% grain box, 
3 new tires, good. 

1972 IHC model 1066 diesel Tractor Turbo charged, 
pressurized cab, TA, Dual Rear Wheels, Dual Hyds, 2 
speed LPTO, real good 

Duz all front end loader with manure bucket and gravel 
Plate. 

Snowplow V, 8 ft. with adjust height, drawbar hitch 
good 

IHC Model 460 tractor, TA, LPTO, Dual hyds., 3 new 
lires, good, Gas. 

MF Model 410 self propelled Combine, 90 bu. grain 
tank, grain monitor, pickup and reels, strawchopper 
kept under shed good. 

Cockshutt Model 419, SP, 14 ft. Swather, Hesston 
table, motor fully overhauled last fall, good canvas. 
Mayrath 27 ft. 6 inch auger with 10 hp motor, 2 yr. old 
tank and 36 ft. boom weed sprayer with ext and broad 
je\ spray for above swather. 

1974, IHC Model 620, Duplex DD 16 ft. Press Drill, 
grass and fertilizer attachment, Twin Hyd. Control and 
Hyd Markers. 

Drill Fill, Smith Rolles, 12 volt auger. 

IHC Model SO deep tillage 14 ft. cultivator sweeps and 
points good. 

IHC Model S55, Transport 12 ft. disc with exts for non 
ridging. 

Cockshutt 24 ft. vibrashank wing type cultivator, cable 
lefi, real good. 

Ajax 36 ft. Hyd Harrow Drawbar with 13 sec. Diamond 
Harrows. 
Rolling on rubber, 24 ft. hanging drawbar 
Cockshutt 5 x 16 tractor plow on rubber throw away 
shares, Hyd. good. 
Calhoun 1500 Ib. fertilizer spreader PTO drive. 
3 ton rubber tired wagon, Hyd hoist and box. 
Viking S roll fan mills 2 set rolls, motor drive 
Cockshutt side rake on rubber PTO 

10 Bale Stooker, 20 bale stook lifter 

New 300 ga. storage tank steel stand, hoses and nozzle 
Used 300 gal. storage tank steel stand. 

500 gal. storage tank, 2 compt. hoses and nozzles. 
Root rake 12 ft. 


Viking 40 inch, 220 volt kitchen range automatic, white 
color, servel fridge, white color, full size, blonded 
bedroom suite, Walnut bedroom suite, Blondwood desk 
and chair, 5 tangerine kitchen chairs, chrome kitchen 
stool, Child’s table and 6 chairs, Electric lamps, Steel 
File Cabinet, Asst. Paints and Other items. 


Approx. 700 bales alfalfa and brdme first cut hay, 
Beatty Portable Rotary pump with hoses, Webster 110 
Volt portable air compressor with paint sprayer and 
attachments. Bolens garden tractor with lawn mower, 
plow, cultivator and disc. Hahn Eclipse riding lawn 
mower, new Sh.p. motor, Lawnboy, 21 inch power lawn 
mower, 3 Hyd. rams and hoses, 3 Jackalls, “% ton chain 
hoist, Set Cornwall taps and Dies, Forge and Blower, 
Anvil, Leg Vise, Post drill and Bits, B & D ‘ inch drill, 
2 steel hog feeders with exts, pipe dies and cutter, 2 
Galv. stock tanks, 4-14 ft. cattle feeders, 400 bu. 
Portable cattle feeder, cattle shute on skids, log chains, 
Set 15-38 tractor chains, Lawn Tables, Lawn swing, 
Asst. hand tools, Misc. iron, collectible IHC stationary 
engine, Platform scale, and other items. 


NOTE: Mr. Parrent has sold only a part of his land, but 
will sell all of his well kept machinery. 


SALE CONDUCTED BY 
BARRHEAD AUCTION MART LTD. 


AUCTIONEER 


AUCTIONEERS LICENSE 050487 
DEISEL PARSONS CHARLES PARSONS 
LIC. 010429 LIC. 010167 
Ph. 342-3017, Westlock Ph. 674-2039, Barrhead 


the first game of.the finals 
with a close 6-5 win over 
Villeneuve. The game was 
played in Legal Thursday 
night as was the second on 
Sunday, but this time Villen- 


euve were the winners by a 
whopping 10-1 score. 

The Klassen brothers led 
the Voyageurs as Dwayne 
picked up three goals and Cy 
two. 


The third and fourth 
ames will be played in 
Riviere Qui Barre Arena 
Tuesday, March 9 and 
Friday, March 12 if the ice 
holds out. If not the series 


will no doubt be moved to 
Morinville where there is 
artificial ice. 

It is a best of seven series 
and fans will see two highly 
competitive teams in action. 


Processed alfalfa situation 


Processed alfalfa prices 
have strengthened in Alberta 
since the beginning of the 
year and domestic demand 
has been excellent, says Don 
Macyk, one of Alberta Agri- 
culture’s marketing analysts. 

He reports that processed 
alfalfa has been steadily 
moving into the domestic 
market. and that only about 
20 per cent of production 
remains in storage at Alberta 
plants. 

Mr. Macyk also reports 


that total production for the 
current crop year is now 
estimated at 107,000 tons, up 
approximately 18,000 tons 
from last year. 

About 80 per cent of last 
year’s processed alfalfa, or 
double the amount processed 
in 1974, is expected to go into 
the domestic market. Twenty 
per cent of the 1975 pro- 
duction went for export, 
mostly to Japan. 

This year Alberta will have 
two more alfalfa processing 


plants in operation than was 
the case last year. The two 
new plants, located in the 
Peace River region and 
northeastern Alberta, bring 
the total to 14 plus two 
portable cubers. 


INDUSTRY OUTLOOK 


Approximately 98,000 ac- 
res of alfalfa are currently 
estimated to be lined up by 
the processors for this year’s 
production. Several plants 


have indicated that they may 
process some alfalfa-grass 
mixtures in 1976 and do 
some custom pelleting of 
grass forages and possibly of 
cereals. 

Mr. Macyk says buyers 
can expect to pay current 
prices for processed alfalfa 
until at least the new crop 
year. The price for sun-cured 
pellets is $70 to $75 per ton 
and the price for dehydrated 
pellets is $85 to $89 per ton. 
Cubes are selling between 


LARGE 
MACHINERY SALE | 


NORTHERN ALBERTA TRACTOR & EQUIPMENT 


ROCHESTER, ALBERTA. 
MONDAY, MARCH 22nd 
22 MILES NORTH OF CLYDE CORNER ON HWY. #2 


SALE TIME: 11:30 A.M. TERMS: CASH 
TRACTORS: 

John Deere model 5020 with cab hydraulics, LPTO 
Diesel 

John Deere 5010 w/cab hydraulics LPTO Diesel 

John Deere Model 4020 complete with cab, hydraulics 
LPTO Diesel 
John Deere Model 4010 complete with cab, hydraulics, 
LPTO Diesel. 

Late Model Case 1370 c/w hydraulics, LPTO Diesel 
Late Model Case 1170 c/w hydraulics, LPTO Diesel 
Late Model Case 1070 c/w hydraulics LPTO Comfort 
King Diesel 

Case Model Comfort King 1030 Diesel with hydraulics 
LPTO 

Case Model 930 Comfort King Diesel with hydraulics, 
LPTO 

Case Model 930 Comfort King Diesel with hydraulics 
Standard 

Case Model 930 Comfort King Diesel Standard with 
Hydraulics. 

Case Model 930 Standard Diesel with Hydraulics 
Case Model 830 Diesel with Hydraulics 

International Model 806 Diesel Tractor w/hydraulics 
Massey Ferguson Model 1100 Diesel 4-wheel drive with 
payloader and 1'% yard bucket. 

Plus other tractors that will arrive on sale site before 
sale date. 


PLOWS: 

IHC 7 x 16; (2) IHC 5x 16; IHC 4x 16; IHCS x 14; IHC 
4x 14; (2) Olivers 6 x 16; Oliver 5 x 16; Case 6 x 16; 
Case 5 x 14; Case 4x 14; (2) John Deere 5 x 14; John 
Deere 4 x 16; (2) John Deere 4 x 14; (2) Massey 
Ferguson 5 x 14; 

All plows are on rubber and have throw-away shears 
and kickbacks 


DISCS: 

John Deere 12 ft. Carrier Tandem disc on rubber 
Athens 11 ft. offset Brush Disc. 

Athens 10 ft. Offset Brush Disc. 

Athens 8 ft. Offset Brush Disc. 

Four Dozer Blades 6 ft. w/3 pt. Hitch 


SALES SUBJECT TO ADDITIONS & DELETIONS 
SHELTER FOR BUYERS 


FOR INFORMATION PHONE -- 
WISCONSIN RAPIDS - 1-423-4279 COLLECT OR 
ROCHESTER 698-3950 OR ANY OTHER NUMBER ON 
THIS SALE AD. 


FOR BETTER SALES AND SERVICE 


SEPT’S AUCTION SERVICE 


HERB and JIM SEPT 

Lic. 010277 Lic. 033686 Leduc 
Phone Leduc 986-2172 or 986-2107 
Phone 785-2330, Sangudo, Box 72 


36 - ST. ALBERT & STURGEON GAZETTE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1976. 


Write Box 683 


$64 to $70 per ton. 


AUCTION SALE 


GERALD BREADNER 


We will sell at his Farm, 11 miles west on Highway 18, 
then 13 miles North, 2 miles East of Westlock OR 714 
miles West, 1 mile North of DAPP 


WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24th -- 11:00 A.M. SHARP 


TERMS: CASH LUNCH AT NOON 
MACHINERY - TRUCKS 

1974 Case Model 1070 Agri King, diesel tractor, Hi-lo 
range drive, 2 speed PTO, with cab, air condition and 
heater, dual hyds, dual rear wheels, used app. 1000 
hrs. A-1 shape. Hyd ram and hoses for above unit. 
197S Case model 118, hyd drive garden tractor with lawn 
mower hardly used, A-1 

1975 Versatile model 400, hyd. static drive, 15 ft. self 
propelled swather, with pickup reel, good canvas, done 
app. 600 acres, A-1 

IHC model 403 self propelled 12 ft. combine, with cab 
and blower, Melroe 10 ft. pickup, strawchopper an 
tank. Good. : 
Allied 35 ft. 7 inch grain auger with B & S motor 
Robin 27 ft. 6 inch auger, Wis. motor 

1975 IHC model 620, DD28 run press drill with grass 
and fert. attachment done app. 550 acres. A-1 

Drill fill 11 ft. Auger with 12 volt motor, good. 

1956, Chevrolet model 1700, % ton truck with new 
motor 6000 miles fully checked over, new tires with 
Robin 15 ton hoist ard 8 x 14 grain box, good. 

1974 Case 6 x 16 tractor plow on rubber, trip beams, 
throw away shears. 

1974 Morris Challenger, 24 ft. hyd. wing type, vibra 
shank cultivator. 

4 secs., Morris tine tooth harrows for above unit. 

1974 Doepher 50 ft. hyd harrow drawbar with 10 sec. 5 
ft. heavy diamond Harrows. 

3 sec. Case Tine Tooth 5% ft. harrows 

Cockshutt Model 247 deep tillage 16% ft. cultivator 
sweeps and points. 

Alteen, 12 ft. transport disc., good. 

1946 Ford 3 ton truck with 600 gal. water tank. 

Dual wheel trailer truck chassis 750 x 20 tires and 9 x 18 
flatbed, good. 

Viking 4 roll fan mill, 3 set rolls 

500 gal. 2 compt. storage tank, steel stand, hoses and 
nozzles. 

500 gal. storage tank, wooden stand hose and nozzle. 
Portable 110 gal. truck tank with quart stroke pump, 
good, 


GRANARIES - MISCELLANEOUS: 

3 Rosco, 1800 bu. steel granaries 

3 Rosco, 1400 bu. steel granaries ‘ 

Viking 15 ft. deepfreeze - fridge 8 cu. ft. - square table - 
dresser - full size bed - wardrobe - 2 step tables - some 
collectible items - asst. dishes - pots and pans - sealers - 
pitchers and other items - Portable air compressor 110 
volt motor - portable 110 volt paint sprayer and hose - 
TV aerial 3 and 5 channel - 2 hyd. rams and hoses - 
Forge - anvil - leg vise - post drill - bench grinder - 
beam scale - delco wind charger derrick and set of 32 
volt batteries - other items. 


NOTE: Most of above machinery has been kept under 
shed and is in good condition. 


SALE CONDUCTED BY 
BARRHEAD AUCTION MART LTD. 
AUCTIONEERS 
LICENSE 050487 
DEISEL PARSONS CHARLES PARSONS 
Lic. 010429 Lic, 010167 
Ph. 342-3017, Westlock Ph. 674-2039, Barrhead